current index to legal periodicals

27
CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library University of Washington Nikki Pike, Managing Editor Ingrid Holmlund, Executive Editor Cindy Fester & Tania Schriwer, Editors Copyright 2019, Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library University of Washington School of Law Key to Citations——April 12, 2019 Boston College Law Review 60 B.C. L. Rev., No. 1, January, 2019. Capital University Law Review 46 Cap. U. L. Rev., No. 4, Fall, 2018. Columbia Journal of Environmental Law 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L., No. 1, Pp. 1-239, 2019. Columbia Law Review 119 Colum. L. Rev., No. 1, January, 2019. Connecticut Journal of International Law 33 Conn. J. Intl L., No. 3, Pp. 305-431, 2018. Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J., No. 2, Spring-Summer, 2018. Denver Law Review 96 Denv. L. Rev., No. 1, Pp. 1-202, 2018. Duke Law Journal 68 Duke L.J., No. 5, February, 2019. Elder Law Journal 26 Elder L.J., No. 2, Pp. 261-460, 2019. Emory Law Journal 68 Emory L.J., No. 3, Pp. 441-684, 2019. Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Poly J., No. 2, Pp. 175-428, 2018. Environmental Law Reporter News & Analysis 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis, No. 2, February, 2019. FIU Law Review 13 FIU L. Rev., No. 2, Fall, 2018. Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J., No. 4, Summer, 2018. Law Journal Harvard Law Review 132 Harv. L. Rev., No. 4, February, 2019. Kentucky Law Journal 107 Ky. L.J., No. 1, Pp. 1-168, 2018-2019. Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative 41 Loy. L.A. Intl & Comp. L. Rev., No. 3, Winter, 2018. Law Review Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J., No. 1, Fall, 2018. Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L., No. 1, Fall, 2018. New York University Review of Law & Social Change 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change, No. 4, Pp. 529-752, 2019. North Dakota Law Review *94 N.D. L. Rev., No. 1, Pp. 1-288, 2019. Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution 33 Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol., No. 4, Pp. 491-584, 2018. Ohio State Law Journal 79 Ohio St. L.J., No. 4, Pp. 619-900, 2018. Rutgers Race and the Law Review 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev., No. 2, Pp. 77-157, 2018. Stanford Law Review 71 Stan. L. Rev., No. 1, January, 2019. Texas Intellectual Property Law Journal 26 Tex. Intell. Prop. L.J., No. 2, Pp. 133-272, 2018. Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 28 Transnatl L. & Contemp. Probs., No. 1, Winter, 2018. Transportation Law Journal 45 Transp. L.J., No. 1, Pp. 1-55, 2018. Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law 27 Tul. J. Intl & Comp. L., No. 1, Winter, 2018. University of Detroit Mercy Law Review 96 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev., No. 1, Fall, 2018. University of Memphis Law Review 49 U. Mem. L. Rev., No. 1, Fall, 2018. University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 22 U. Pa. J.L. & Soc. Change, No. 2, Pp. 71-120, 2019. University of the Pacific Law Review **50 U. Pac. L. Rev., No. 2, Pp. 177-316, 2019. Virginia Environmental Law Journal 37 Va. Envtl. L.J., No. 1, Pp. 1-88, 2019. *A portion of this issue comprises the North Dakota Supreme Court Review. ** This entire issue comprises a student survey: Review of Selected 2018 California Legislation. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ADMINISTRATIVE LAW Daniel E. Walters. The self-delegation false alarm: analyzing Auer deferences effects on agency rules. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 85-168 (2019). Note. An abdication approach to state standing. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1301-1322 (2019). Grant Snyder. Note. How safe is too safe? Exemption 7(F) and the withholding of critical documents. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 245-271 (2018). Joan Campau. Note. Presidential permitting for pipelines: constitutionality and reviewability. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 273-295 (2018).

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CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library

University of Washington

Nikki Pike, Managing Editor

Ingrid Holmlund, Executive Editor

Cindy Fester & Tania Schriwer, Editors

Copyright 2019, Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library

University of Washington School of Law

Key to Citations——April 12, 2019

Boston College Law Review 60 B.C. L. Rev., No. 1, January, 2019.

Capital University Law Review 46 Cap. U. L. Rev., No. 4, Fall, 2018.

Columbia Journal of Environmental Law 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L., No. 1, Pp. 1-239, 2019.

Columbia Law Review 119 Colum. L. Rev., No. 1, January, 2019.

Connecticut Journal of International Law 33 Conn. J. Int’l L., No. 3, Pp. 305-431, 2018.

Connecticut Public Interest Law Journal 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J., No. 2, Spring-Summer, 2018.

Denver Law Review 96 Denv. L. Rev., No. 1, Pp. 1-202, 2018.

Duke Law Journal 68 Duke L.J., No. 5, February, 2019.

Elder Law Journal 26 Elder L.J., No. 2, Pp. 261-460, 2019.

Emory Law Journal 68 Emory L.J., No. 3, Pp. 441-684, 2019.

Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J., No. 2, Pp. 175-428, 2018.

Environmental Law Reporter News & Analysis 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis, No. 2, February, 2019.

FIU Law Review 13 FIU L. Rev., No. 2, Fall, 2018.

Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J., No. 4, Summer, 2018.

Law Journal

Harvard Law Review 132 Harv. L. Rev., No. 4, February, 2019.

Kentucky Law Journal 107 Ky. L.J., No. 1, Pp. 1-168, 2018-2019.

Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev., No. 3, Winter, 2018.

Law Review

Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J., No. 1, Fall, 2018.

Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L., No. 1, Fall, 2018.

New York University Review of Law & Social Change 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change, No. 4, Pp. 529-752, 2019.

North Dakota Law Review *94 N.D. L. Rev., No. 1, Pp. 1-288, 2019.

Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution 33 Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol., No. 4, Pp. 491-584, 2018.

Ohio State Law Journal 79 Ohio St. L.J., No. 4, Pp. 619-900, 2018.

Rutgers Race and the Law Review 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev., No. 2, Pp. 77-157, 2018.

Stanford Law Review 71 Stan. L. Rev., No. 1, January, 2019.

Texas Intellectual Property Law Journal 26 Tex. Intell. Prop. L.J., No. 2, Pp. 133-272, 2018.

Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs., No. 1, Winter, 2018.

Transportation Law Journal 45 Transp. L.J., No. 1, Pp. 1-55, 2018.

Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L., No. 1, Winter, 2018.

University of Detroit Mercy Law Review 96 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev., No. 1, Fall, 2018.

University of Memphis Law Review 49 U. Mem. L. Rev., No. 1, Fall, 2018.

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 22 U. Pa. J.L. & Soc. Change, No. 2, Pp. 71-120, 2019.

University of the Pacific Law Review **50 U. Pac. L. Rev., No. 2, Pp. 177-316, 2019.

Virginia Environmental Law Journal 37 Va. Envtl. L.J., No. 1, Pp. 1-88, 2019.

*A portion of this issue comprises the North Dakota Supreme Court Review.

** This entire issue comprises a student survey: Review of Selected 2018 California Legislation.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW

Daniel E. Walters. The self-delegation false alarm: analyzing

Auer deference’s effects on agency rules. 119 Colum. L. Rev.

85-168 (2019).

Note. An abdication approach to state standing. 132 Harv. L.

Rev. 1301-1322 (2019).

Grant Snyder. Note. How safe is too safe? Exemption 7(F) and

the withholding of critical documents. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. &

Admin. L. 245-271 (2018).

Joan Campau. Note. Presidential permitting for pipelines:

constitutionality and reviewability. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin.

L. 273-295 (2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 2

April 12, 2019

Linda A. Malone. The emperor’s new clothes: the variety of

stakeholders in climate change regulation assuming the mantle

of federal and international authority. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 705-736

(2018).

Matthew J. Warren. Judicial review of Surface Transportation

Board decisions: an empirical analysis. 45 Transp. L.J. 1-34

(2018).

AGRICULTURE LAW

Sarah Schindler. Food federalism: states, local governments,

and the fight for food sovereignty. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 761-780

(2018).

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

Cassandra Snyder. Note. Out of context: examining the role of

context in active enforcement foreign patrimony law disputes.

119 Colum. L. Rev. 205-248 (2019).

Emily Dombrowski. Comment. Addressing art trafficking and

restitution through anti-money laundering legal regimes. 27

Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 111-130 (2018).

BANKING AND FINANCE

Nora McGuire. Note. Whose dime is it anyway? A

comprehensive look at federal and state government landscapes

for senior financial exploitation laws concerning financial

institutions. 26 Elder L.J. 431-460 (2019).

BIOGRAPHY

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal

University of Memphis Law Review

Commemorating the Retirement of Douglas Scherer.

Introduction by Martin H. Malin; tributes by Wayne N. Outten,

Howard A. Glickstein, Ramona L. Paetzold; contributions by

Michael Selmi, Ann C. Hodges, Marion C. Crain, Ken

Matheny, Maria O’Brien Hylton, L. Camille Hébert, Susan

Bisom-Rapp, Matthew W. Finkin, Charles A. Sullivan; book

review by Marcia L. McCormick. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp.

Pol’y J. 175-428 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here?

Introduction by Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel; introduction to

keynote address by Sen. Doug Jones; keynote address by Hon.

Eric H. Holder Jr.; articles by Tracey Maclin, Mark Osler,

Toussaint Losier, Richard L. Hasen, Dorothy E. Roberts,

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Dorothy A. Brown, Dayna Bowen

Matthew, Charles W. McKinney Jr., Beverly Daniel Tatum,

student Maria Savarese. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 1-313 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS

Yaniv Heled, Liza Vertinsky, Cass Brewer. Why healthcare

companies should be(come) benefit corporations. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 73-144 (2019).

Paul Rissman, Diana Kearney. The rise of the shadow ESG

regulators: investment advisers, sustainability accounting, and

their effects on corporate social responsibility. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10155-10187 (2019).

Carol R. Goforth. How blockchain could increase the need for

and availability of contractual ordering for companies and their

investors. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 1-63 (2019).

Sarah E. Light. The law of the corporation as environmental

law. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 137-213 (2019).

Adrian Lopez. Comment. The future of corporate inversions

under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L.

131-150 (2018).

CIVIL RIGHTS, GENERALLY

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

New York University Review of Law & Social Change

University of Memphis Law Review

Amanda Peters. Mass arrests & the particularized probable

cause requirement. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 217-270 (2019).

Sarah Ingles. Comment. Legislating against hate: why Ohio’s

hate crime statute, and the sentencing enhancements that

support it, cannot remedy institutional problems and continued

bigotry. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 701-738 (2018).

Paul Barker. Note. Religious exemptions and the vocational

dimension of work. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 169-204 (2019).

John Vlahoplus. Sessions v. Morales-Santana: beyond the

mean remedy. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 311-336 (2018).

Zach Lass. Comment. Lowe v. Raemisch: lowering the bar of

the qualified immunity defense. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 177-201

(2018).

Allen Page. Comment. The problems with alleging Federal

Government conspiracies under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3). 68

Emory L.J. 563-605 (2019).

Courtney Lauren Anderson. Planning for public health. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 619-635 (2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 3

April 12, 2019

MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here?

Introduction by Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel; introduction to

keynote address by Sen. Doug Jones; keynote address by Hon.

Eric H. Holder Jr.; articles by Tracey Maclin, Mark Osler,

Toussaint Losier, Richard L. Hasen, Dorothy E. Roberts,

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Dorothy A. Brown, Dayna Bowen

Matthew, Charles W. McKinney Jr., Beverly Daniel Tatum,

student Maria Savarese. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 1-313 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

COMMUNICATIONS LAW

Clay Calvert. The First Amendment, compelled speech &

minors: jettisoning the FCC mandate for children’s television

programming. 107 Ky. L.J. 35-59 (2018-2019).

Alexandra Carthew. Case comment. Searches and seizures —

Fourth Amendment and reasonableness in general: protection

of privacy interests in the digital age. Carpenter v. United

States, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018). 94 N.D. L. Rev. 197-220

(2019).

Lisa V. Zivkovic. The alignment between the Electronic

Communications Privacy Act and the European Union’s

General Data Protection Regulation: reform needs to protect

the data subject. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 189-232

(2018).

COMPARATIVE AND FOREIGN LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Connecticut Journal of International Law

Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative

Law Review

Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems

Tulane Journal of International and Comparative Law

Christina L. Pollard. Here come many more mail-order brides:

why IMBRA fails women escaping the Russian Federation. 46

Cap. U. L. Rev. 609-700 (2018).

Paris, Policy, and the Grid. Articles by Ángel R. Oquendo,

Steven Ferrey, Vincent P. Pace; keynote address by Manuel

Pulgar-Vidal; responses by Robert Klee, Joseph A.

MacDougald, J. Timmons Roberts. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 305-

431 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Matthew W. Finkin. Pay privacy in comparative context. 22

Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 355-369 (2018).

The Confiscation of Property in Poland and Efforts at

Restitution. Introduction by Michael Bazyler; contributions by

Michael Bazyler, Szymon Gostynski, Grzegorz Woźniak,

Stefan Jacyno, Barbara Blaszczyk, Leszek Bosek, Katarzyna

Królikowska, Przemyslaw Szymczyk, Katarzyna J.

McNaughton, Maciej Górski, Jozef Forystek, Malgorzata

Świętczak, Radoslaw Wiśniewski, Mateusz Tchórzewski,

Tomasz Luterek, Edna Kaplan, Karol F. Radziwiłł, Jan Kuklík,

Branko Lakić, Haris Dajč, Aharon Mor, Kathryn Lee Boyd,

Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela, Kristen L. Nelson, Evan

Hochberg. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 269-738

(2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Ronen Avraham. Should courts award pain and suffering

damages in patent infringement cases? 26 Tex. Intell. Prop.

L.J. 215-230 (2018).

CONFLICT OF LAWS

Eugene Temchenko. Student article. Discovering the truth

behind an amicus brief. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 95-147 (2019).

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, GENERALLY

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Ohio State Law Journal

Rutgers Race and the Law Review

University of Detroit Mercy Law Review

Ángel R. Oquendo. Fifty shades of green: from individual to

planetary environmental rights. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 307-316

(2018).

Lawrence J. Trautman. Grab ‘em by the emoluments: the

crumbling ethical foundation of Donald Trump’s presidency.

17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 169-254 (2018).

Ryan M. Scoville. Ad hoc diplomats. 68 Duke L.J. 907-1002

(2019).

Jonathan Remy Nash. National personal jurisdiction. 68

Emory L.J. 509-562 (2019).

Allen Page. Comment. The problems with alleging Federal

Government conspiracies under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3). 68

Emory L.J. 563-605 (2019).

Maria O’Brien Hylton. A few observations about the curious

state of Massachusetts labor law: public-sector unions after

Janus. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 301-319 (2018).

Saikrishna Bangalore Prakash. Of synchronicity and supreme

law. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1220-1299 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 4

April 12, 2019

Note. An abdication approach to state standing. 132 Harv. L.

Rev. 1301-1322 (2019).

Christopher N. Jacovitch. Note. Conflicts between Kentucky’s

new tort reform and the jural rights doctrine. 107 Ky. L.J. 123-

148 (2018-2019).

Chelise L. Conn Greer. Note. Less due process than terrorists:

an analysis of the Eric C. Conn fiasco. 107 Ky. L.J. 149-168

(2018-2019).

Leszek Bosek, Katarzyna Królikowska. Constitutional

dimensions of the judicial restitution of wrongly expropriated

property in Poland. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 369-

407 (2018).

Robert B. McKinstry Jr., John C. Dernbach. Applying the

Pennsylvania Environmental Rights Amendment meaningfully

to climate disruption. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 49-114

(2018).

Neoshia R. Roemer. Finding harmony or swimming in the

void: the unavoidable conflict between the Interstate Compact

on the Placement of Children and the Indian Child Welfare Act.

94 N.D. L. Rev. 149-180 (2019).

North Dakota Supreme Court Review. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 259-

288 (2019).

Re-Thinking State Relevance. Articles by Courtney Lauren

Anderson, Cindy G. Buys, Daniel C. K. Chow, Denise A. Grab,

Michael A. Livermore, James G. Hodge Jr., Danielle

Chronister, Alexandra Hess, Madeline Morcelle, Jennifer Piatt,

Sarah A. Wetter, Linda A. Malone, William McGuire, Sarah

Schindler, Ian Sheldon, Navad Shoked, Lindsay F. Wiley. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 619-899 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

William Baude. Constitutional liquidation. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 1-

70 (2019).

M. Ehteshamul Bari. The incorporation of the system of non-

party caretaker government in the Constitution of Bangladesh

in 1996 as a means of strengthening democracy, its deletion in

2011 and the lapse of Bangladesh into tyranny following the

non-participatory general election of 2014: a critical appraisal.

28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 27-88 (2018).

Patrick T. Quirk. The undefined remains unprotected: tensions

between conscience and the law in Germany by way of Joseph

Isensee. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 55-92 (2018).

Symposium on Sanctuary Cities. Introduction by Andrew F.

Moore; articles by Kristina M. Campbell, Ilaria Di Gioia,

Elizabeth Knowles, Glenys P. Spence. 96 U. Det. Mercy L.

Rev. 1-137 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

CONTRACTS

Michael Selmi. Supreme Court Term 2017-2018: the umpires

play ball. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 195-234 (2018).

Charles A. Sullivan. Clergy contracts. 22 Employee Rts. &

Emp. Pol’y J. 371-408 (2018).

Robin Bradley Kar, Margaret Jane Radin. Pseudo-contract and

shared meaning analysis. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1135-1219 (2019).

Carol R. Goforth. How blockchain could increase the need for

and availability of contractual ordering for companies and their

investors. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 1-63 (2019).

Ronen Avraham. Should courts award pain and suffering

damages in patent infringement cases? 26 Tex. Intell. Prop.

L.J. 215-230 (2018).

COURTS

North Dakota Supreme Court Review. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 259-

288 (2019).

CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE

Amanda Peters. Mass arrests & the particularized probable

cause requirement. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 217-270 (2019).

Sarah Ingles. Comment. Legislating against hate: why Ohio’s

hate crime statute, and the sentencing enhancements that

support it, cannot remedy institutional problems and continued

bigotry. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 701-738 (2018).

Zachary R. Hoover. Comment. The pervasion of cell phones

and the Fourth Amendment: a right to privacy in locational

data. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 739-782 (2018).

Jocelyn Simonson. The place of “the people” in criminal

procedure. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 249-307 (2019).

Kate Levine. Discipline and policing. 68 Duke L.J. 839-905

(2019).

Hugh B. Hamilton III. Note. At the water’s hedge:

international insider-trading enforcement after Morrison. 68

Duke L.J. 1003-1041 (2019).

Nora McGuire. Note. Whose dime is it anyway? A

comprehensive look at federal and state government landscapes

for senior financial exploitation laws concerning financial

institutions. 26 Elder L.J. 431-460 (2019).

Tiffani N. Darden. Constitutionally different: a child’s right to

substantive due process. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 211-270 (2018).

Kevin Morrow. Student article. Bridging the jurisdictional

void: cross-deputization agreements in Indian Country. 94

N.D. L. Rev. 65-94 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 5

April 12, 2019

Alexandra Carthew. Case comment. Searches and seizures —

Fourth Amendment and reasonableness in general: protection

of privacy interests in the digital age. Carpenter v. United

States, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018). 94 N.D. L. Rev. 197-220

(2019).

North Dakota Supreme Court Review. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 259-

288 (2019).

Cindy G. Buys. Help or hindrance? The relevance of states in

implementing international criminal treaties. 79 Ohio St. L.J.

637-649 (2018).

Ben Gifford. Prison crime and the economics of incarceration.

71 Stan. L. Rev. 71-135 (2019).

Katherine Kaiser Moy. Note. Tailoring Seibert’s intent inquiry

to two-step counterterrorism interrogations. 71 Stan. L. Rev.

215-263 (2019).

Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel. Where Do We Go From Here:

Memphis and the legacy of Dr. King’s unfinished work. 49 U.

Mem. L. Rev. 1-26 (2018).

Tracey Maclin, student Maria Savarese. Martin Luther King,

Jr. and pretext stops (and arrests): reflections on how far we

have not come fifty years later. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 43-76

(2018).

Mark Osler. Short of the mountaintop: race neutrality, criminal

law, and the Jericho road ahead. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 77-100

(2018).

Toussaint Losier. The rise and fall of the 1969 Chicago Jobs

Campaign: street gangs, coalition politics, and the origins of

mass incarceration. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 101-136 (2018).

Ke Gang. Student article. Federal courts’ habeas corpus

jurisdiction on a Secretary of State’s extradition decision in the

context of a Convention Against Torture challenge. 22 U. Pa.

J.L. & Soc. Change 95-120 (2019).

DISABILITY LAW

Joshua B. Kay. The Americans with Disabilities Act: legal and

practical applications in child protection proceedings. 46 Cap.

U. L. Rev. 783-818 (2018).

Chelise L. Conn Greer. Note. Less due process than terrorists:

an analysis of the Eric C. Conn fiasco. 107 Ky. L.J. 149-168

(2018-2019).

DISASTER LAW

Sarah J. Adams-Schoen. Beyond localism: harnessing state

adaptation lawmaking to facilitate local climate resilience. 8

Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 185-244 (2018).

Katherine Davis. Comment. Seismicity induced by hydraulic

fracturing and wastewater disposal injection: a comparison of

regulatory frameworks. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 93-110

(2018).

Glenys P. Spence. A chameleon in the courts — the fallacy of

agency “intra-circuit non-acquiescence” in temporary protected

status jurisprudence: time for uniformity to address the plight

of disaster-induced displacement for migrant groups in the

United States. 96 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 105-137 (2018).

DISPUTE RESOLUTION

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution

Amy B. Cyphert. The devil is in the details: exploring

restorative justice as an option for campus sexual assault

responses under Title IX. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 51-85 (2018).

Michael Selmi. Supreme Court Term 2017-2018: the umpires

play ball. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 195-234 (2018).

Ann C. Hodges. Employee voice in arbitration. 22 Employee

Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 235-257 (2018).

Ben Trachtenberg. The 2015 University of Missouri protests

and their lessons for higher education policy and

administration. 107 Ky. L.J. 61-121 (2018-2019).

Kathryn Lee Boyd, Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela. Justice

for Nazi and Communist era property expropriation through

international investment arbitration. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 677-699 (2018).

DOMESTIC RELATIONS

Christina L. Pollard. Here come many more mail-order brides:

why IMBRA fails women escaping the Russian Federation. 46

Cap. U. L. Rev. 609-700 (2018).

Joshua B. Kay. The Americans with Disabilities Act: legal and

practical applications in child protection proceedings. 46 Cap.

U. L. Rev. 783-818 (2018).

Tobin Sparling. Clay pigeon or Trojan horse: Pigeon v.

Turner and the intersection of gay rights and judicial ethics in

Texas. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 255-281 (2018).

Laura Ann Raymond. Note. Sibling consortium: recognizing

the right to recovery in Connecticut. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J.

337-365 (2018).

Neoshia R. Roemer. Finding harmony or swimming in the

void: the unavoidable conflict between the Interstate Compact

on the Placement of Children and the Indian Child Welfare Act.

94 N.D. L. Rev. 149-180 (2019).

ECONOMICS

Yaniv Heled, Liza Vertinsky, Cass Brewer. Why healthcare

companies should be(come) benefit corporations. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 73-144 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 6

April 12, 2019

Eric Kades. Of Piketty and perpetuities: dynastic wealth in the

twenty-first century (and beyond). 60 B.C. L. Rev. 145-215

(2019).

Katherine Fiedler, Steven Lord, Jason J. Czarnezki. Life cycle

costing and food systems: concepts, trends, and challenges of

impact valuation. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 1-47 (2018).

Ian Sheldon. Economic and legal analysis of climate policy

and border tax adjustments: federal vs. state regulation. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 781-800 (2018).

Ben Gifford. Prison crime and the economics of incarceration.

71 Stan. L. Rev. 71-135 (2019).

Ronen Avraham. Should courts award pain and suffering

damages in patent infringement cases? 26 Tex. Intell. Prop.

L.J. 215-230 (2018).

EDUCATION LAW

Amy B. Cyphert. The devil is in the details: exploring

restorative justice as an option for campus sexual assault

responses under Title IX. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 51-85 (2018).

Alexandra J. Berger. Comment. Lessons to be learned:

Taxpayers for Public Education v. Douglas County School

District and the flaws of the Douglas County Choice

Scholarship Program. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 145-176 (2018).

Marcia L. McCormick. Book review. Changing what they

cannot accept: teachers unions fighting education “reform”

from Chicago to Oklahoma. A Fight for the Soul of Public

Education by Stephen K. Ashby, Robert Bruno. 22 Employee

Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 409-428 (2018).

Michael Pego. Comment. The delusion of amateurism in

college sports: why scholarship student athletes are destined to

be considered “employees” under the NLRA. 13 FIU L. Rev.

277-311 (2018).

Nathan Converse. University trademarks and “mixed speech”

on college campuses: a case study of Gerlich v. Leath and

student free speech rights. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media &

Ent. L.J. 777-829 (2018).

Ben Trachtenberg. The 2015 University of Missouri protests

and their lessons for higher education policy and

administration. 107 Ky. L.J. 61-121 (2018-2019).

Taurus Myhand. Student article. A dream still deferred: the

unlawful use of student fees for instructional technology in an

Alabama public school causing a disparate impact for minority

children. 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 77-100 (2018).

Connor Vincent Martin. Note. New Jersey’s experiment with

interdistrict school choice as a racially neutral alternative: is it

succeeding? 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 101-132 (2018).

Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel. Where Do We Go From Here:

Memphis and the legacy of Dr. King’s unfinished work. 49 U.

Mem. L. Rev. 1-26 (2018).

Tomiko Brown-Nagin. Just schools: a holistic approach to the

education of impoverished students. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 185-

204 (2018).

ELDER LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Elder Law Journal

ELECTIONS AND VOTING

Richard L. Hasen. Civil Right No. 1: Dr. King’s unfinished

voting rights revolution. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 137-166 (2018).

EMPLOYMENT PRACTICE

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal

Joanne Song McLaughlin. Limited legal recourse for older

women’s intersectional discrimination under the Age

Discrimination in Employment Act. 26 Elder L.J. 287-321

(2019).

William Hrabe. Note. Will you still need me, will you still hire

me, when I’m sixty-four: disparate impact claims and job

applicants under the ADEA. 26 Elder L.J. 395-429 (2019).

Commemorating the Retirement of Douglas Scherer.

Introduction by Martin H. Malin; tributes by Wayne N. Outten,

Howard A. Glickstein, Ramona L. Paetzold; contributions by

Michael Selmi, Ann C. Hodges, Marion C. Crain, Ken

Matheny, Maria O’Brien Hylton, L. Camille Hébert, Susan

Bisom-Rapp, Matthew W. Finkin, Charles A. Sullivan; book

review by Marcia L. McCormick. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp.

Pol’y J. 175-428 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Leslie C. Griffin. Religious freedom, human rights, and

peaceful coexistence. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 77-105 (2018).

Anthony Saccocio. Case comment. Civil rights —

discrimination by reason of sexual orientation or identity: the

Sixth Circuit determines that transgender and transitioning

status are protected classes under Title VII. Equal

Employment Opportunity Commission v. R.G. & G.R.

Harris Funeral Homes, Inc., 884 F.3d 560 (6th Cir. 2018). 94

N.D. L. Rev. 239-257 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 7

April 12, 2019

Briana Beltran. 134,368 unnamed workers: client-centered

representation on behalf of H-2A agricultural guestworkers. 42

N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 529-594 (2019).

Jessica A. Moldovan. Authenticity at work: harmonizing Title

VII with free speech jurisprudence to protect employee

authenticity in the workplace. 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc.

Change 699-752 (2019).

ENERGY AND UTILITIES LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Connecticut Journal of International Law

Hale McAnulty. Note. A dirty waste—how renewable energy

policies have financed the unsustainable waste-to-energy

industry. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 387-412 (2019).

Jason Bressler. Note. Blocking interstate natural gas pipelines:

how to curb climate change while strengthening the nation’s

energy system. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 137-179 (2019).

Mitchell Hokanson. Note. Avoiding the doldrums: evaluating

the need for change in the offshore wind permitting process.

44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 181-239 (2019).

Paris, Policy, and the Grid. Articles by Ángel R. Oquendo,

Steven Ferrey, Vincent P. Pace; keynote address by Manuel

Pulgar-Vidal; responses by Robert Klee, Joseph A.

MacDougald, J. Timmons Roberts. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 305-

431 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Columbia Journal of Environmental Law

Connecticut Journal of International Law

Environmental Law Reporter News & Analysis

Michigan Journal of Environmental & Administrative Law

Virginia Environmental Law Journal

Hale McAnulty. Note. A dirty waste—how renewable energy

policies have financed the unsustainable waste-to-energy

industry. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 387-412 (2019).

Paris, Policy, and the Grid. Articles by Ángel R. Oquendo,

Steven Ferrey, Vincent P. Pace; keynote address by Manuel

Pulgar-Vidal; responses by Robert Klee, Joseph A.

MacDougald, J. Timmons Roberts. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 305-

431 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Denise A. Grab, Michael A. Livermore. Environmental

federalism in a dark time. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 667-684 (2018).

Linda A. Malone. The emperor’s new clothes: the variety of

stakeholders in climate change regulation assuming the mantle

of federal and international authority. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 705-736

(2018).

Sarah Schindler. Food federalism: states, local governments,

and the fight for food sovereignty. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 761-780

(2018).

Ian Sheldon. Economic and legal analysis of climate policy

and border tax adjustments: federal vs. state regulation. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 781-800 (2018).

Sarah E. Light. The law of the corporation as environmental

law. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 137-213 (2019).

Lacey K. Reimer. Note. Climate change and the Arctic: ideas

for how the United States and Canada can protect their Arctic

Indigenous peoples. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 233-

261 (2018).

Katherine Davis. Comment. Seismicity induced by hydraulic

fracturing and wastewater disposal injection: a comparison of

regulatory frameworks. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 93-110

(2018).

Naznen Rahman. Comment. A comparative analysis of air

pollution control in Delhi and Beijing: can India’s model of

judicial activism affect environmental change in China? 27

Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 151-180 (2018).

ESTATES AND TRUSTS

Eric Kades. Of Piketty and perpetuities: dynastic wealth in the

twenty-first century (and beyond). 60 B.C. L. Rev. 145-215

(2019).

EVIDENCE

Justin Sevier. Legitimizing character evidence. 68 Emory L.J.

441-508 (2019).

FIRST AMENDMENT

Paul Barker. Note. Religious exemptions and the vocational

dimension of work. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 169-204 (2019).

Michael Selmi. Supreme Court Term 2017-2018: the umpires

play ball. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 195-234 (2018).

Charles A. Sullivan. Clergy contracts. 22 Employee Rts. &

Emp. Pol’y J. 371-408 (2018).

Nathan Converse. University trademarks and “mixed speech”

on college campuses: a case study of Gerlich v. Leath and

student free speech rights. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media &

Ent. L.J. 777-829 (2018).

Clay Calvert. The First Amendment, compelled speech &

minors: jettisoning the FCC mandate for children’s television

programming. 107 Ky. L.J. 35-59 (2018-2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 8

April 12, 2019

Richard Blum. Labor picketing, the right to protest, and the

neoliberal First Amendment. 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc.

Change 595-648 (2019).

Lindsey Lawton. A new loyalty oath: New York’s targeted ban

on state funds for Palestinian boycott supporters. 42 N.Y.U.

Rev. L. & Soc. Change 649-698 (2019).

Jessica A. Moldovan. Authenticity at work: harmonizing Title

VII with free speech jurisprudence to protect employee

authenticity in the workplace. 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc.

Change 699-752 (2019).

FOOD AND DRUG LAW

Yaniv Heled, Liza Vertinsky, Cass Brewer. Why healthcare

companies should be(come) benefit corporations. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 73-144 (2019).

Amy-Lee Goodman. Note. A “natural” stand off between the

Food and Drug Administration and the courts: the rise in food-

labeling litigation & the need for regulatory reform. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 271-315 (2019).

Connor Fuchs. Comment. Process is due: the World Health

Organization prequalification of medicines. 68 Emory L.J.

643-684 (2019).

Katherine Fiedler, Steven Lord, Jason J. Czarnezki. Life cycle

costing and food systems: concepts, trends, and challenges of

impact valuation. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 1-47 (2018).

Sarah Schindler. Food federalism: states, local governments,

and the fight for food sovereignty. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 761-780

(2018).

FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT

Jonathan Remy Nash. National personal jurisdiction. 68

Emory L.J. 509-562 (2019).

Note. Equal dignity — heeding its call. 132 Harv. L. Rev.

1323-1344 (2019).

Agustin Paneque. Note. Civil rights and tort calculation:

challenging the reliability and constitutionality of race-based

and gender-based life expectancy and future wage earning

calculations. 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 133-157 (2018).

GENDER

Christina L. Pollard. Here come many more mail-order brides:

why IMBRA fails women escaping the Russian Federation. 46

Cap. U. L. Rev. 609-700 (2018).

Joanne Song McLaughlin. Limited legal recourse for older

women’s intersectional discrimination under the Age

Discrimination in Employment Act. 26 Elder L.J. 287-321

(2019).

L. Camille Hébert. Is “MeToo” only a social movement or a

legal movement too? 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 321-

336 (2018).

Note. Equal dignity — heeding its call. 132 Harv. L. Rev.

1323-1344 (2019).

Anthony Saccocio. Case comment. Civil rights —

discrimination by reason of sexual orientation or identity: the

Sixth Circuit determines that transgender and transitioning

status are protected classes under Title VII. Equal

Employment Opportunity Commission v. R.G. & G.R.

Harris Funeral Homes, Inc., 884 F.3d 560 (6th Cir. 2018). 94

N.D. L. Rev. 239-257 (2019).

Agustin Paneque. Note. Civil rights and tort calculation:

challenging the reliability and constitutionality of race-based

and gender-based life expectancy and future wage earning

calculations. 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 133-157 (2018).

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS

Lindsey Lawton. A new loyalty oath: New York’s targeted ban

on state funds for Palestinian boycott supporters. 42 N.Y.U.

Rev. L. & Soc. Change 649-698 (2019).

HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

Yaniv Heled, Liza Vertinsky, Cass Brewer. Why healthcare

companies should be(come) benefit corporations. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 73-144 (2019).

Karen Levy, Lauren Kilgour, Clara Berridge. Regulating

privacy in public/private space: the case of nursing home

monitoring laws. 26 Elder L.J. 323-363 (2019).

Dan Lewis. Note. Thank you for your service: why elderly

veterans with PTSD need medical-legal partnerships. 26 Elder

L.J. 365-394 (2019).

Mikayla Paolini. Comment. NFL takes a page from the big

tobacco playbook: assumption of risk in the CTE crisis. 68

Emory L.J. 607-642 (2019).

Connor Fuchs. Comment. Process is due: the World Health

Organization prequalification of medicines. 68 Emory L.J.

643-684 (2019).

Dane Stuhlsatz. Comment. Florida’s certificate of need: a

prescription for government-private collusion and antitrust

violation. 13 FIU L. Rev. 241-275 (2018).

Courtney Lauren Anderson. Planning for public health. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 619-635 (2018).

James G. Hodge Jr., Danielle Chronister, Alexandra Hess,

Madeline Morcelle, Jennifer Piatt, Sarah A. Wetter. Public

health preemption+: constitutional affronts to public health

innovations. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 685-703 (2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 9

April 12, 2019

Sarah Schindler. Food federalism: states, local governments,

and the fight for food sovereignty. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 761-780

(2018).

Lindsay F. Wiley. Medicaid for all? State-level single-payer

health care. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 843-899 (2018).

Ilaria Di Gioia. From liberal states’ rights litigation to liberal

states’ rights discourse: a study of state oppositional strategies

to the ACA and federal immigration laws. 96 U. Det. Mercy L.

Rev. 55-76 (2018).

Dorothy E. Roberts. The most shocking and inhuman

inequality: thinking structurally about poverty, racism, and

health inequities. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 167-183 (2018).

Dayna Bowen Matthew. “Lessons from The Other America.”

Turning a public health lens on fighting racism and poverty. 49

U. Mem. L. Rev. 229-262 (2018).

HOUSING LAW

Logan Carpenter. Case comment. Negligence — standards of

care: premises liability claims alleging dangerous activities

against a landowner barred under most circumstances. Bjerk v.

Anderson, 2018 ND 124, 911 N.W.2d 343. 94 N.D. L. Rev.

181-196 (2019).

Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel. Where Do We Go From Here:

Memphis and the legacy of Dr. King’s unfinished work. 49 U.

Mem. L. Rev. 1-26 (2018).

Dorothy A. Brown. Homeownership in black and white: the

role of tax policy in increasing housing inequity. 49 U. Mem.

L. Rev. 205-227 (2018).

Dayna Bowen Matthew. “Lessons from The Other America.”

Turning a public health lens on fighting racism and poverty. 49

U. Mem. L. Rev. 229-262 (2018).

HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law

Review

Ángel R. Oquendo. Fifty shades of green: from individual to

planetary environmental rights. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 307-316

(2018).

Connor Fuchs. Comment. Process is due: the World Health

Organization prequalification of medicines. 68 Emory L.J.

643-684 (2019).

The Confiscation of Property in Poland and Efforts at

Restitution. Introduction by Michael Bazyler; contributions by

Michael Bazyler, Szymon Gostynski, Grzegorz Woźniak,

Stefan Jacyno, Barbara Blaszczyk, Leszek Bosek, Katarzyna

Królikowska, Przemyslaw Szymczyk, Katarzyna J.

McNaughton, Maciej Górski, Jozef Forystek, Malgorzata

Świętczak, Radoslaw Wiśniewski, Mateusz Tchórzewski,

Tomasz Luterek, Edna Kaplan, Karol F. Radziwiłł, Jan Kuklík,

Branko Lakić, Haris Dajč, Aharon Mor, Kathryn Lee Boyd,

Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela, Kristen L. Nelson, Evan

Hochberg. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 269-738

(2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Robert C. Blitt. The Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s

(OIC) response to sexual orientation and gender identity rights:

a challenge to equality and nondiscrimination under

international law. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 89-187

(2018).

Elizabeth Knowles. Detained without due process: when does

it end? 96 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 77-103 (2018).

IMMIGRATION LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

University of Detroit Mercy Law Review

Christina L. Pollard. Here come many more mail-order brides:

why IMBRA fails women escaping the Russian Federation. 46

Cap. U. L. Rev. 609-700 (2018).

Trevor George Gardner. Immigrant sanctuary as the “old

normal”: a brief history of police federalism. 119 Colum. L.

Rev. 1-83 (2019).

John Vlahoplus. Sessions v. Morales-Santana: beyond the

mean remedy. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 311-336 (2018).

Briana Beltran. 134,368 unnamed workers: client-centered

representation on behalf of H-2A agricultural guestworkers. 42

N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 529-594 (2019).

Symposium on Sanctuary Cities. Introduction by Andrew F.

Moore; articles by Kristina M. Campbell, Ilaria Di Gioia,

Elizabeth Knowles, Glenys P. Spence. 96 U. Det. Mercy L.

Rev. 1-137 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 10

April 12, 2019

INDIAN AND ABORIGINAL LAW

Kevin Morrow. Student article. Bridging the jurisdictional

void: cross-deputization agreements in Indian Country. 94

N.D. L. Rev. 65-94 (2019).

Neoshia R. Roemer. Finding harmony or swimming in the

void: the unavoidable conflict between the Interstate Compact

on the Placement of Children and the Indian Child Welfare Act.

94 N.D. L. Rev. 149-180 (2019).

North Dakota Supreme Court Review. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 259-

288 (2019).

Lacey K. Reimer. Note. Climate change and the Arctic: ideas

for how the United States and Canada can protect their Arctic

Indigenous peoples. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 233-

261 (2018).

INFORMATION PRIVACY

Lauren Stewart. Note. Big data discrimination: maintaining

protection of individual privacy without disincentivizing

businesses’ use of biometric data to enhance security. 60 B.C.

L. Rev. 349-386 (2019).

Zachary R. Hoover. Comment. The pervasion of cell phones

and the Fourth Amendment: a right to privacy in locational

data. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 739-782 (2018).

Charlotte A. Tschider. Regulating the Internet of Things:

discrimination, privacy, and cybersecurity in the artificial

intelligence age. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 87-143 (2018).

Kate Levine. Discipline and policing. 68 Duke L.J. 839-905

(2019).

Karen Levy, Lauren Kilgour, Clara Berridge. Regulating

privacy in public/private space: the case of nursing home

monitoring laws. 26 Elder L.J. 323-363 (2019).

Lisa V. Zivkovic. The alignment between the Electronic

Communications Privacy Act and the European Union’s

General Data Protection Regulation: reform needs to protect

the data subject. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 189-232

(2018).

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment

Law Journal

Texas Intellectual Property Law Journal

Ashish Bharadwaj, Manveen Singh. A single spark can start a

prairie fire: implications of the 2015 amendments to IEEE-

SA’s patent policy. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 583-608 (2018).

Adam Mossoff. Trademark as a property right. 107 Ky. L.J. 1-

33 (2018-2019).

Patent Damages Symposium. Articles by Michael

Abramowicz, Lisa Larrimore Ouellette, Ronen Avraham, Peter

Lee. 26 Tex. Intell. Prop. L.J. 133-272 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

INTERNATIONAL LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Connecticut Journal of International Law

Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems

Cassandra Snyder. Note. Out of context: examining the role of

context in active enforcement foreign patrimony law disputes.

119 Colum. L. Rev. 205-248 (2019).

Paris, Policy, and the Grid. Articles by Ángel R. Oquendo,

Steven Ferrey, Vincent P. Pace; keynote address by Manuel

Pulgar-Vidal; responses by Robert Klee, Joseph A.

MacDougald, J. Timmons Roberts. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 305-

431 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Connor Fuchs. Comment. Process is due: the World Health

Organization prequalification of medicines. 68 Emory L.J.

643-684 (2019).

Carl Bruch, et al. The changing nature of conflict,

peacebuilding, and environmental cooperation. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10134-10154 (2019).

Kathryn Lee Boyd, Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela. Justice

for Nazi and Communist era property expropriation through

international investment arbitration. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 677-699 (2018).

Eugene Temchenko. Student article. Discovering the truth

behind an amicus brief. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 95-147 (2019).

Cindy G. Buys. Help or hindrance? The relevance of states in

implementing international criminal treaties. 79 Ohio St. L.J.

637-649 (2018).

Linda A. Malone. The emperor’s new clothes: the variety of

stakeholders in climate change regulation assuming the mantle

of federal and international authority. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 705-736

(2018).

Emily Dombrowski. Comment. Addressing art trafficking and

restitution through anti-money laundering legal regimes. 27

Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 111-130 (2018).

Margaret Scharle. Comment. Learning from the not-so-distant

past: using the Iranian negotiations to guide the

nonproliferation of North Korea. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L.

181-199 (2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 11

April 12, 2019

S. J. Tilden. Comment. Africa’s conflict with the International

Criminal Court: the African Court of Justice and Human and

Peoples’ Rights as an alternative to the ICC. 27 Tul. J. Int’l &

Comp. L. 201-218 (2018).

Ke Gang. Student article. Federal courts’ habeas corpus

jurisdiction on a Secretary of State’s extradition decision in the

context of a Convention Against Torture challenge. 22 U. Pa.

J.L. & Soc. Change 95-120 (2019).

Sharmila L. Murthy. States and cities as “norm sustainers”: a

role for subnational actors in the Paris Agreement on climate

change. 37 Va. Envtl. L.J. 1-51 (2019).

INTERNATIONAL TRADE

Hugh B. Hamilton III. Note. At the water’s hedge:

international insider-trading enforcement after Morrison. 68

Duke L.J. 1003-1041 (2019).

Lindsey Lawton. A new loyalty oath: New York’s targeted ban

on state funds for Palestinian boycott supporters. 42 N.Y.U.

Rev. L. & Soc. Change 649-698 (2019).

Daniel C. K. Chow. Trade sanctions and the division of

federal-state power over international trade. 79 Ohio St. L.J.

651-666 (2018).

William McGuire. A state-level view of NAFTA: economic

implications and policy options. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 737-759

(2018).

Ian Sheldon. Economic and legal analysis of climate policy

and border tax adjustments: federal vs. state regulation. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 781-800 (2018).

Divesh Kaul. Trans-Pacific Partnership Trump(ed): was TPP

that bad an acronym in new U.S. trade terminology? 27 Tul. J.

Int’l & Comp. L. 1-53 (2018).

JUDGES

Tobin Sparling. Clay pigeon or Trojan horse: Pigeon v.

Turner and the intersection of gay rights and judicial ethics in

Texas. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 255-281 (2018).

JURISDICTION

Hugh B. Hamilton III. Note. At the water’s hedge:

international insider-trading enforcement after Morrison. 68

Duke L.J. 1003-1041 (2019).

Jonathan Remy Nash. National personal jurisdiction. 68

Emory L.J. 509-562 (2019).

Note. An abdication approach to state standing. 132 Harv. L.

Rev. 1301-1322 (2019).

Eugene Temchenko. Student article. Discovering the truth

behind an amicus brief. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 95-147 (2019).

Ke Gang. Student article. Federal courts’ habeas corpus

jurisdiction on a Secretary of State’s extradition decision in the

context of a Convention Against Torture challenge. 22 U. Pa.

J.L. & Soc. Change 95-120 (2019).

JURISPRUDENCE

Eric R. Claeys. Property, concepts, and functions. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 1-72 (2019).

Adam D. Moore. Intellectual property and the prisoner’s

dilemma: a game theory justification of copyrights, patents, and

trade secrets. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J. 831-

869 (2018).

Patrick T. Quirk. The undefined remains unprotected: tensions

between conscience and the law in Germany by way of Joseph

Isensee. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 55-92 (2018).

JUVENILES

Joshua B. Kay. The Americans with Disabilities Act: legal and

practical applications in child protection proceedings. 46 Cap.

U. L. Rev. 783-818 (2018).

Clay Calvert. The First Amendment, compelled speech &

minors: jettisoning the FCC mandate for children’s television

programming. 107 Ky. L.J. 35-59 (2018-2019).

Ben Trachtenberg. The 2015 University of Missouri protests

and their lessons for higher education policy and

administration. 107 Ky. L.J. 61-121 (2018-2019).

Tiffani N. Darden. Constitutionally different: a child’s right to

substantive due process. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 211-270 (2018).

Neoshia R. Roemer. Finding harmony or swimming in the

void: the unavoidable conflict between the Interstate Compact

on the Placement of Children and the Indian Child Welfare Act.

94 N.D. L. Rev. 149-180 (2019).

LABOR LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal

Commemorating the Retirement of Douglas Scherer.

Introduction by Martin H. Malin; tributes by Wayne N. Outten,

Howard A. Glickstein, Ramona L. Paetzold; contributions by

Michael Selmi, Ann C. Hodges, Marion C. Crain, Ken

Matheny, Maria O’Brien Hylton, L. Camille Hébert, Susan

Bisom-Rapp, Matthew W. Finkin, Charles A. Sullivan; book

review by Marcia L. McCormick. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp.

Pol’y J. 175-428 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 12

April 12, 2019

Michael Pego. Comment. The delusion of amateurism in

college sports: why scholarship student athletes are destined to

be considered “employees” under the NLRA. 13 FIU L. Rev.

277-311 (2018).

Briana Beltran. 134,368 unnamed workers: client-centered

representation on behalf of H-2A agricultural guestworkers. 42

N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 529-594 (2019).

Richard Blum. Labor picketing, the right to protest, and the

neoliberal First Amendment. 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc.

Change 595-648 (2019).

Toussaint Losier. The rise and fall of the 1969 Chicago Jobs

Campaign: street gangs, coalition politics, and the origins of

mass incarceration. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 101-136 (2018).

LAND USE

Shana Jones, et al. Roads to nowhere in four states: state and

local governments in the Atlantic southeast facing sea-level

rise. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 67-136 (2019).

Steven Ferrey. Rewired infrastructure post-Paris. 33 Conn. J.

Int’l L. 331-363 (2018).

Sarah J. Adams-Schoen. Beyond localism: harnessing state

adaptation lawmaking to facilitate local climate resilience. 8

Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 185-244 (2018).

LAW AND SOCIETY

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Loyola University Chicago Law Journal

University of Memphis Law Review

University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change

Daniel E. Walters. The self-delegation false alarm: analyzing

Auer deference’s effects on agency rules. 119 Colum. L. Rev.

85-168 (2019).

Jocelyn Simonson. The place of “the people” in criminal

procedure. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 249-307 (2019).

Justin Sevier. Legitimizing character evidence. 68 Emory L.J.

441-508 (2019).

Paul Rissman, Diana Kearney. The rise of the shadow ESG

regulators: investment advisers, sustainability accounting, and

their effects on corporate social responsibility. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10155-10187 (2019).

The Question of Religious Freedom: From John Courtney

Murray, SJ and Vatican II to the Present. Articles by Miguel H.

Díaz, Robin W. Lovin, Barry Sullivan, Leslie C. Griffin, Hille

Haker, Kathleen A. Brady, Carmen Nanko-Fernández, Thomas

C. Berg. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 1-209 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Katherine Fiedler, Steven Lord, Jason J. Czarnezki. Life cycle

costing and food systems: concepts, trends, and challenges of

impact valuation. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 1-47 (2018).

MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here?

Introduction by Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel; introduction to

keynote address by Sen. Doug Jones; keynote address by Hon.

Eric H. Holder Jr.; articles by Tracey Maclin, Mark Osler,

Toussaint Losier, Richard L. Hasen, Dorothy E. Roberts,

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Dorothy A. Brown, Dayna Bowen

Matthew, Charles W. McKinney Jr., Beverly Daniel Tatum,

student Maria Savarese. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 1-313 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

LAW ENFORCEMENT

Amanda Peters. Mass arrests & the particularized probable

cause requirement. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 217-270 (2019).

Zachary R. Hoover. Comment. The pervasion of cell phones

and the Fourth Amendment: a right to privacy in locational

data. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 739-782 (2018).

Trevor George Gardner. Immigrant sanctuary as the “old

normal”: a brief history of police federalism. 119 Colum. L.

Rev. 1-83 (2019).

Kate Levine. Discipline and policing. 68 Duke L.J. 839-905

(2019).

Kevin Morrow. Student article. Bridging the jurisdictional

void: cross-deputization agreements in Indian Country. 94

N.D. L. Rev. 65-94 (2019).

Alexandra Carthew. Case comment. Searches and seizures —

Fourth Amendment and reasonableness in general: protection

of privacy interests in the digital age. Carpenter v. United

States, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018). 94 N.D. L. Rev. 197-220

(2019).

Cindy G. Buys. Help or hindrance? The relevance of states in

implementing international criminal treaties. 79 Ohio St. L.J.

637-649 (2018).

Katherine Kaiser Moy. Note. Tailoring Seibert’s intent inquiry

to two-step counterterrorism interrogations. 71 Stan. L. Rev.

215-263 (2019).

Tracey Maclin, student Maria Savarese. Martin Luther King,

Jr. and pretext stops (and arrests): reflections on how far we

have not come fifty years later. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 43-76

(2018).

Mark Osler. Short of the mountaintop: race neutrality, criminal

law, and the Jericho road ahead. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 77-100

(2018).

Toussaint Losier. The rise and fall of the 1969 Chicago Jobs

Campaign: street gangs, coalition politics, and the origins of

mass incarceration. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 101-136 (2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 13

April 12, 2019

LEGAL EDUCATION

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

FIU Law Review

Three Years of Decanal Lectures on Legal Education.

Introduction by Tawia B. Ansah; articles by Daniel B.

Rodriguez, Erwin Chemerinsky, Eduardo M. Peñalver. 13 FIU

L. Rev. 195-240 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

LEGAL HISTORY

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative

Law Review

University of Memphis Law Review

Trevor George Gardner. Immigrant sanctuary as the “old

normal”: a brief history of police federalism. 119 Colum. L.

Rev. 1-83 (2019).

Ryan M. Scoville. Ad hoc diplomats. 68 Duke L.J. 907-1002

(2019).

The Confiscation of Property in Poland and Efforts at

Restitution. Introduction by Michael Bazyler; contributions by

Michael Bazyler, Szymon Gostynski, Grzegorz Woźniak,

Stefan Jacyno, Barbara Blaszczyk, Leszek Bosek, Katarzyna

Królikowska, Przemyslaw Szymczyk, Katarzyna J.

McNaughton, Maciej Górski, Jozef Forystek, Malgorzata

Świętczak, Radoslaw Wiśniewski, Mateusz Tchórzewski,

Tomasz Luterek, Edna Kaplan, Karol F. Radziwiłł, Jan Kuklík,

Branko Lakić, Haris Dajč, Aharon Mor, Kathryn Lee Boyd,

Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela, Kristen L. Nelson, Evan

Hochberg. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 269-738

(2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

William Baude. Constitutional liquidation. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 1-

70 (2019).

MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here?

Introduction by Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel; introduction to

keynote address by Sen. Doug Jones; keynote address by Hon.

Eric H. Holder Jr.; articles by Tracey Maclin, Mark Osler,

Toussaint Losier, Richard L. Hasen, Dorothy E. Roberts,

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Dorothy A. Brown, Dayna Bowen

Matthew, Charles W. McKinney Jr., Beverly Daniel Tatum,

student Maria Savarese. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 1-313 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

LEGAL PROFESSION

Alice G. Abreu, Richard K. Greenstein. Rebranding tax /

increasing diversity. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 1-49 (2018).

LEGAL RESEARCH AND LIBRARIES

Articles. 33 Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol. 497-577 (2018).

LEGISLATION

Sarah Ingles. Comment. Legislating against hate: why Ohio’s

hate crime statute, and the sentencing enhancements that

support it, cannot remedy institutional problems and continued

bigotry. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 701-738 (2018).

Nora McGuire. Note. Whose dime is it anyway? A

comprehensive look at federal and state government landscapes

for senior financial exploitation laws concerning financial

institutions. 26 Elder L.J. 431-460 (2019).

Allen Page. Comment. The problems with alleging Federal

Government conspiracies under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3). 68

Emory L.J. 563-605 (2019).

Timothy T. Hsieh. A bridge between copyright and patent law:

towards a modern-day reapplication of the Semiconductor Chip

Protection Act. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J.

729-775 (2018).

Christopher N. Jacovitch. Note. Conflicts between Kentucky’s

new tort reform and the jural rights doctrine. 107 Ky. L.J. 123-

148 (2018-2019).

MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE

Madeline Roe. Note. Who’s driving that car?: an analysis of

regulatory and potential liability frameworks for driverless

cars. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 317-347 (2019).

Karen Levy, Lauren Kilgour, Clara Berridge. Regulating

privacy in public/private space: the case of nursing home

monitoring laws. 26 Elder L.J. 323-363 (2019).

Christopher N. Jacovitch. Note. Conflicts between Kentucky’s

new tort reform and the jural rights doctrine. 107 Ky. L.J. 123-

148 (2018-2019).

MILITARY, WAR, AND PEACE

Dan Lewis. Note. Thank you for your service: why elderly

veterans with PTSD need medical-legal partnerships. 26 Elder

L.J. 365-394 (2019).

Carl Bruch, et al. The changing nature of conflict,

peacebuilding, and environmental cooperation. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10134-10154 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 14

April 12, 2019

Katherine Kaiser Moy. Note. Tailoring Seibert’s intent inquiry

to two-step counterterrorism interrogations. 71 Stan. L. Rev.

215-263 (2019).

Margaret Scharle. Comment. Learning from the not-so-distant

past: using the Iranian negotiations to guide the

nonproliferation of North Korea. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L.

181-199 (2018).

MOTOR VEHICLES

Madeline Roe. Note. Who’s driving that car?: an analysis of

regulatory and potential liability frameworks for driverless

cars. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 317-347 (2019).

NATURAL RESOURCES LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Columbia Journal of Environmental Law

Virginia Environmental Law Journal

Carl Bruch, et al. The changing nature of conflict,

peacebuilding, and environmental cooperation. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10134-10154 (2019).

Robert B. McKinstry Jr., John C. Dernbach. Applying the

Pennsylvania Environmental Rights Amendment meaningfully

to climate disruption. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 49-114

(2018).

OIL, GAS, AND MINERAL LAW

Bret Wells, Tracy Hester. Abandoned but not forgotten:

improperly plugged and orphaned wells may pose serious

concerns for shale development. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L.

115-183 (2018).

Joan Campau. Note. Presidential permitting for pipelines:

constitutionality and reviewability. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin.

L. 273-295 (2018).

Katherine Davis. Comment. Seismicity induced by hydraulic

fracturing and wastewater disposal injection: a comparison of

regulatory frameworks. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 93-110

(2018).

POLITICS

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Connecticut Journal of International Law

Loyola University Chicago Law Journal

Ohio State Law Journal

University of Memphis Law Review

Jocelyn Simonson. The place of “the people” in criminal

procedure. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 249-307 (2019).

Paris, Policy, and the Grid. Articles by Ángel R. Oquendo,

Steven Ferrey, Vincent P. Pace; keynote address by Manuel

Pulgar-Vidal; responses by Robert Klee, Joseph A.

MacDougald, J. Timmons Roberts. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 305-

431 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Ryan M. Scoville. Ad hoc diplomats. 68 Duke L.J. 907-1002

(2019).

Marion C. Crain, Ken Matheny. Labor unions, solidarity and

money. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 259-300 (2018).

The Question of Religious Freedom: From John Courtney

Murray, SJ and Vatican II to the Present. Articles by Miguel H.

Díaz, Robin W. Lovin, Barry Sullivan, Leslie C. Griffin, Hille

Haker, Kathleen A. Brady, Carmen Nanko-Fernández, Thomas

C. Berg. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 1-209 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Lindsey Lawton. A new loyalty oath: New York’s targeted ban

on state funds for Palestinian boycott supporters. 42 N.Y.U.

Rev. L. & Soc. Change 649-698 (2019).

Re-Thinking State Relevance. Articles by Courtney Lauren

Anderson, Cindy G. Buys, Daniel C. K. Chow, Denise A. Grab,

Michael A. Livermore, James G. Hodge Jr., Danielle

Chronister, Alexandra Hess, Madeline Morcelle, Jennifer Piatt,

Sarah A. Wetter, Linda A. Malone, William McGuire, Sarah

Schindler, Ian Sheldon, Navad Shoked, Lindsay F. Wiley. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 619-899 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here?

Introduction by Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel; introduction to

keynote address by Sen. Doug Jones; keynote address by Hon.

Eric H. Holder Jr.; articles by Tracey Maclin, Mark Osler,

Toussaint Losier, Richard L. Hasen, Dorothy E. Roberts,

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Dorothy A. Brown, Dayna Bowen

Matthew, Charles W. McKinney Jr., Beverly Daniel Tatum,

student Maria Savarese. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 1-313 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE

Zach Lass. Comment. Lowe v. Raemisch: lowering the bar of

the qualified immunity defense. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 177-201

(2018).

Justin Sevier. Legitimizing character evidence. 68 Emory L.J.

441-508 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 15

April 12, 2019

Nicholas Almendares. The false allure of settlement pressure.

50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 271-325 (2018).

Eugene Temchenko. Student article. Discovering the truth

behind an amicus brief. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 95-147 (2019).

Briana Beltran. 134,368 unnamed workers: client-centered

representation on behalf of H-2A agricultural guestworkers. 42

N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 529-594 (2019).

PRESIDENT/EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT

Lawrence J. Trautman. Grab ‘em by the emoluments: the

crumbling ethical foundation of Donald Trump’s presidency.

17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 169-254 (2018).

Ryan M. Scoville. Ad hoc diplomats. 68 Duke L.J. 907-1002

(2019).

Joan Campau. Note. Presidential permitting for pipelines:

constitutionality and reviewability. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin.

L. 273-295 (2018).

PROPERTY—PERSONAL AND REAL

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative

Law Review

Eric R. Claeys. Property, concepts, and functions. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 1-72 (2019).

Adam Mossoff. Trademark as a property right. 107 Ky. L.J. 1-

33 (2018-2019).

The Confiscation of Property in Poland and Efforts at

Restitution. Introduction by Michael Bazyler; contributions by

Michael Bazyler, Szymon Gostynski, Grzegorz Woźniak,

Stefan Jacyno, Barbara Blaszczyk, Leszek Bosek, Katarzyna

Królikowska, Przemyslaw Szymczyk, Katarzyna J.

McNaughton, Maciej Górski, Jozef Forystek, Malgorzata

Świętczak, Radoslaw Wiśniewski, Mateusz Tchórzewski,

Tomasz Luterek, Edna Kaplan, Karol F. Radziwiłł, Jan Kuklík,

Branko Lakić, Haris Dajč, Aharon Mor, Kathryn Lee Boyd,

Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela, Kristen L. Nelson, Evan

Hochberg. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 269-738

(2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Ronen Avraham. Should courts award pain and suffering

damages in patent infringement cases? 26 Tex. Intell. Prop.

L.J. 215-230 (2018).

PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY

Justin Sevier. Legitimizing character evidence. 68 Emory L.J.

441-508 (2019).

RACE AND ETHNICITY

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Rutgers Race and the Law Review

University of Memphis Law Review

Alice G. Abreu, Richard K. Greenstein. Rebranding tax /

increasing diversity. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 1-49 (2018).

Ben Trachtenberg. The 2015 University of Missouri protests

and their lessons for higher education policy and

administration. 107 Ky. L.J. 61-121 (2018-2019).

Barry Sullivan. Prophesy, public theology, and questions of

justice: some modest reflections. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 45-75

(2018).

MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here?

Introduction by Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel; introduction to

keynote address by Sen. Doug Jones; keynote address by Hon.

Eric H. Holder Jr.; articles by Tracey Maclin, Mark Osler,

Toussaint Losier, Richard L. Hasen, Dorothy E. Roberts,

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Dorothy A. Brown, Dayna Bowen

Matthew, Charles W. McKinney Jr., Beverly Daniel Tatum,

student Maria Savarese. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 1-313 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

RELIGION

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Loyola University Chicago Law Journal

Paul Barker. Note. Religious exemptions and the vocational

dimension of work. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 169-204 (2019).

Alexandra J. Berger. Comment. Lessons to be learned:

Taxpayers for Public Education v. Douglas County School

District and the flaws of the Douglas County Choice

Scholarship Program. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 145-176 (2018).

Charles A. Sullivan. Clergy contracts. 22 Employee Rts. &

Emp. Pol’y J. 371-408 (2018).

The Question of Religious Freedom: From John Courtney

Murray, SJ and Vatican II to the Present. Articles by Miguel H.

Díaz, Robin W. Lovin, Barry Sullivan, Leslie C. Griffin, Hille

Haker, Kathleen A. Brady, Carmen Nanko-Fernández, Thomas

C. Berg. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 1-209 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Robert C. Blitt. The Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s

(OIC) response to sexual orientation and gender identity rights:

a challenge to equality and nondiscrimination under

international law. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 89-187

(2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 16

April 12, 2019

Patrick T. Quirk. The undefined remains unprotected: tensions

between conscience and the law in Germany by way of Joseph

Isensee. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 55-92 (2018).

Kristina M. Campbell. Sanctuary, temporary protected status,

and Catholic social teaching. 96 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 25-53

(2018).

REMEDIES

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law

Review

Texas Intellectual Property Law Journal

The Confiscation of Property in Poland and Efforts at

Restitution. Introduction by Michael Bazyler; contributions by

Michael Bazyler, Szymon Gostynski, Grzegorz Woźniak,

Stefan Jacyno, Barbara Blaszczyk, Leszek Bosek, Katarzyna

Królikowska, Przemyslaw Szymczyk, Katarzyna J.

McNaughton, Maciej Górski, Jozef Forystek, Malgorzata

Świętczak, Radoslaw Wiśniewski, Mateusz Tchórzewski,

Tomasz Luterek, Edna Kaplan, Karol F. Radziwiłł, Jan Kuklík,

Branko Lakić, Haris Dajč, Aharon Mor, Kathryn Lee Boyd,

Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela, Kristen L. Nelson, Evan

Hochberg. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 269-738

(2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Agustin Paneque. Note. Civil rights and tort calculation:

challenging the reliability and constitutionality of race-based

and gender-based life expectancy and future wage earning

calculations. 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 133-157 (2018).

Patent Damages Symposium. Articles by Michael

Abramowicz, Lisa Larrimore Ouellette, Ronen Avraham, Peter

Lee. 26 Tex. Intell. Prop. L.J. 133-272 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

REPRODUCTION

Leslie C. Griffin. Religious freedom, human rights, and

peaceful coexistence. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 77-105 (2018).

RETIREMENT SECURITY

Ian Ayres, Jacob Hacker. Social Security Plus. 26 Elder L.J.

261-285 (2019).

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

Madeline Roe. Note. Who’s driving that car?: an analysis of

regulatory and potential liability frameworks for driverless

cars. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 317-347 (2019).

Lauren Stewart. Note. Big data discrimination: maintaining

protection of individual privacy without disincentivizing

businesses’ use of biometric data to enhance security. 60 B.C.

L. Rev. 349-386 (2019).

Ashish Bharadwaj, Manveen Singh. A single spark can start a

prairie fire: implications of the 2015 amendments to IEEE-

SA’s patent policy. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 583-608 (2018).

Zachary R. Hoover. Comment. The pervasion of cell phones

and the Fourth Amendment: a right to privacy in locational

data. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 739-782 (2018).

Robert W. Adler. Coevolution of law and science: a Clean

Water Act case study. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 1-65 (2019).

Charlotte A. Tschider. Regulating the Internet of Things:

discrimination, privacy, and cybersecurity in the artificial

intelligence age. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 87-143 (2018).

Timothy T. Hsieh. A bridge between copyright and patent law:

towards a modern-day reapplication of the Semiconductor Chip

Protection Act. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J.

729-775 (2018).

Carol R. Goforth. How blockchain could increase the need for

and availability of contractual ordering for companies and their

investors. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 1-63 (2019).

Alexandra Carthew. Case comment. Searches and seizures —

Fourth Amendment and reasonableness in general: protection

of privacy interests in the digital age. Carpenter v. United

States, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018). 94 N.D. L. Rev. 197-220

(2019).

R. Wai Wong. Autonomous rail technologies: diffusion, risk

perception & public acceptance. 45 Transp. L.J. 35-47 (2018).

SECURITIES LAW

Hugh B. Hamilton III. Note. At the water’s hedge:

international insider-trading enforcement after Morrison. 68

Duke L.J. 1003-1041 (2019).

Paul Rissman, Diana Kearney. The rise of the shadow ESG

regulators: investment advisers, sustainability accounting, and

their effects on corporate social responsibility. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10155-10187 (2019).

Carol R. Goforth. How blockchain could increase the need for

and availability of contractual ordering for companies and their

investors. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 1-63 (2019).

Sarah E. Light. The law of the corporation as environmental

law. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 137-213 (2019).

SENTENCING AND PUNISHMENT

Sarah Ingles. Comment. Legislating against hate: why Ohio’s

hate crime statute, and the sentencing enhancements that

support it, cannot remedy institutional problems and continued

bigotry. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 701-738 (2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 17

April 12, 2019

Jonathan Erwin-Frank. Is mass incarceration unconstitutional?

The case for Eighth Amendment limits on noncapital sentences.

17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 283-309 (2018).

Kaitlyn Henke. Case comment. Forfeitures — personal

property in general: return of noncontraband files. State v.

Kremer, 2018 ND 61, 907 N.W.2d 403. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 221-

238 (2019).

Ben Gifford. Prison crime and the economics of incarceration.

71 Stan. L. Rev. 71-135 (2019).

Regina Austin. “Second looks, second chances”: collaborating

with Lifers, Inc. on a video about commutation of LWOP

sentences. 22 U. Pa. J.L. & Soc. Change 71-93 (2019).

Ke Gang. Student article. Federal courts’ habeas corpus

jurisdiction on a Secretary of State’s extradition decision in the

context of a Convention Against Torture challenge. 22 U. Pa.

J.L. & Soc. Change 95-120 (2019).

SEX CRIMES

Amy B. Cyphert. The devil is in the details: exploring

restorative justice as an option for campus sexual assault

responses under Title IX. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 51-85 (2018).

Kaitlyn Henke. Case comment. Forfeitures — personal

property in general: return of noncontraband files. State v.

Kremer, 2018 ND 61, 907 N.W.2d 403. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 221-

238 (2019).

SEXUAL ORIENTATION

Paul Barker. Note. Religious exemptions and the vocational

dimension of work. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 169-204 (2019).

Tobin Sparling. Clay pigeon or Trojan horse: Pigeon v.

Turner and the intersection of gay rights and judicial ethics in

Texas. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 255-281 (2018).

Leslie C. Griffin. Religious freedom, human rights, and

peaceful coexistence. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 77-105 (2018).

Thomas C. Berg. Religious freedom and nondiscrimination.

50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 181-209 (2018).

Robert C. Blitt. The Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s

(OIC) response to sexual orientation and gender identity rights:

a challenge to equality and nondiscrimination under

international law. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 89-187

(2018).

SOCIAL WELFARE

Ian Ayres, Jacob Hacker. Social Security Plus. 26 Elder L.J.

261-285 (2019).

Dan Lewis. Note. Thank you for your service: why elderly

veterans with PTSD need medical-legal partnerships. 26 Elder

L.J. 365-394 (2019).

Chelise L. Conn Greer. Note. Less due process than terrorists:

an analysis of the Eric C. Conn fiasco. 107 Ky. L.J. 149-168

(2018-2019).

Lindsay F. Wiley. Medicaid for all? State-level single-payer

health care. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 843-899 (2018).

SPORTS

Mikayla Paolini. Comment. NFL takes a page from the big

tobacco playbook: assumption of risk in the CTE crisis. 68

Emory L.J. 607-642 (2019).

Michael Pego. Comment. The delusion of amateurism in

college sports: why scholarship student athletes are destined to

be considered “employees” under the NLRA. 13 FIU L. Rev.

277-311 (2018).

STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Ohio State Law Journal

Shana Jones, et al. Roads to nowhere in four states: state and

local governments in the Atlantic southeast facing sea-level

rise. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 67-136 (2019).

Trevor George Gardner. Immigrant sanctuary as the “old

normal”: a brief history of police federalism. 119 Colum. L.

Rev. 1-83 (2019).

Note. An abdication approach to state standing. 132 Harv. L.

Rev. 1301-1322 (2019).

Sarah J. Adams-Schoen. Beyond localism: harnessing state

adaptation lawmaking to facilitate local climate resilience. 8

Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 185-244 (2018).

Kevin Morrow. Student article. Bridging the jurisdictional

void: cross-deputization agreements in Indian Country. 94

N.D. L. Rev. 65-94 (2019).

Re-Thinking State Relevance. Articles by Courtney Lauren

Anderson, Cindy G. Buys, Daniel C. K. Chow, Denise A. Grab,

Michael A. Livermore, James G. Hodge Jr., Danielle

Chronister, Alexandra Hess, Madeline Morcelle, Jennifer Piatt,

Sarah A. Wetter, Linda A. Malone, William McGuire, Sarah

Schindler, Ian Sheldon, Navad Shoked, Lindsay F. Wiley. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 619-899 (2018).

(For contents see the Tables of Contents of Indexed Law

Reviews for this journal.)

Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel. Where Do We Go From Here:

Memphis and the legacy of Dr. King’s unfinished work. 49 U.

Mem. L. Rev. 1-26 (2018).

Toussaint Losier. The rise and fall of the 1969 Chicago Jobs

Campaign: street gangs, coalition politics, and the origins of

mass incarceration. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 101-136 (2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 18

April 12, 2019

Sharmila L. Murthy. States and cities as “norm sustainers”: a

role for subnational actors in the Paris Agreement on climate

change. 37 Va. Envtl. L.J. 1-51 (2019).

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

Michael Selmi. Supreme Court Term 2017-2018: the umpires

play ball. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 195-234 (2018).

TAX POLICY

Alice G. Abreu, Richard K. Greenstein. Rebranding tax /

increasing diversity. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 1-49 (2018).

Dorothy A. Brown. Homeownership in black and white: the

role of tax policy in increasing housing inequity. 49 U. Mem.

L. Rev. 205-227 (2018).

TAXATION—FEDERAL

Dorothy A. Brown. Homeownership in black and white: the

role of tax policy in increasing housing inequity. 49 U. Mem.

L. Rev. 205-227 (2018).

TAXATION—FEDERAL ESTATE AND GIFT

Eric Kades. Of Piketty and perpetuities: dynastic wealth in the

twenty-first century (and beyond). 60 B.C. L. Rev. 145-215

(2019).

TAXATION—STATE AND LOCAL

Navad Shoked. Cities taxing new sins: the judicial embrace of

local excise taxation. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 801-842 (2018).

TAXATION—TRANSNATIONAL

Mateusz Tchórzewski. Taxation of the restitution of

confiscated property in Poland. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L.

Rev. 547-556 (2018).

Adrian Lopez. Comment. The future of corporate inversions

under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L.

131-150 (2018).

TERRORISM

Grant Snyder. Note. How safe is too safe? Exemption 7(F) and

the withholding of critical documents. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. &

Admin. L. 245-271 (2018).

Katherine Kaiser Moy. Note. Tailoring Seibert’s intent inquiry

to two-step counterterrorism interrogations. 71 Stan. L. Rev.

215-263 (2019).

TORTS

Amanda Peters. Mass arrests & the particularized probable

cause requirement. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 217-270 (2019).

Madeline Roe. Note. Who’s driving that car?: an analysis of

regulatory and potential liability frameworks for driverless

cars. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 317-347 (2019).

Shana Jones, et al. Roads to nowhere in four states: state and

local governments in the Atlantic southeast facing sea-level

rise. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 67-136 (2019).

Laura Ann Raymond. Note. Sibling consortium: recognizing

the right to recovery in Connecticut. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J.

337-365 (2018).

Allen Page. Comment. The problems with alleging Federal

Government conspiracies under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3). 68

Emory L.J. 563-605 (2019).

Mikayla Paolini. Comment. NFL takes a page from the big

tobacco playbook: assumption of risk in the CTE crisis. 68

Emory L.J. 607-642 (2019).

Jeffrey I. Greenwood. Note. Group defamation, power, and a

new test for determining plaintiff eligibility. 28 Fordham

Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J. 871-945 (2018).

Christopher N. Jacovitch. Note. Conflicts between Kentucky’s

new tort reform and the jural rights doctrine. 107 Ky. L.J. 123-

148 (2018-2019).

Logan Carpenter. Case comment. Negligence — standards of

care: premises liability claims alleging dangerous activities

against a landowner barred under most circumstances. Bjerk v.

Anderson, 2018 ND 124, 911 N.W.2d 343. 94 N.D. L. Rev.

181-196 (2019).

Agustin Paneque. Note. Civil rights and tort calculation:

challenging the reliability and constitutionality of race-based

and gender-based life expectancy and future wage earning

calculations. 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 133-157 (2018).

TRADE REGULATION

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Fordham Intellectual Property, Media & Entertainment Law

Journal

Amy-Lee Goodman. Note. A “natural” stand off between the

Food and Drug Administration and the courts: the rise in food-

labeling litigation & the need for regulatory reform. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 271-315 (2019).

Lauren Stewart. Note. Big data discrimination: maintaining

protection of individual privacy without disincentivizing

businesses’ use of biometric data to enhance security. 60 B.C.

L. Rev. 349-386 (2019).

Dane Stuhlsatz. Comment. Florida’s certificate of need: a

prescription for government-private collusion and antitrust

violation. 13 FIU L. Rev. 241-275 (2018).

Adam Mossoff. Trademark as a property right. 107 Ky. L.J. 1-

33 (2018-2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 19

April 12, 2019

Sarah E. Light. The law of the corporation as environmental

law. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 137-213 (2019).

TRANSPORTATION LAW

For more on this subject see the Tables of Contents of

Indexed Law Reviews for:

Transportation Law Journal

Shana Jones, et al. Roads to nowhere in four states: state and

local governments in the Atlantic southeast facing sea-level

rise. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 67-136 (2019).

WATER LAW

Eric R. Claeys. Property, concepts, and functions. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 1-72 (2019).

Robert W. Adler. Coevolution of law and science: a Clean

Water Act case study. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 1-65 (2019).

Jason Bressler. Note. Blocking interstate natural gas pipelines:

how to curb climate change while strengthening the nation’s

energy system. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 137-179 (2019).

The Use of PFAS at Industrial and Military Facilities:

Technical, Regulatory, and Legal Issues. Peter Zeeb,

moderator; Rula Deeb, Eric Burneson, Virginia Yingling,

Adam Baas, panelists. 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis

10109-10124 (2019).

Melissa K. Scanlan. Droughts, floods, and scarcity on a

climate-disrupted planet: understanding the legal challenges

and opportunities for groundwater sustainability. 37 Va. Envtl.

L.J. 52-88 (2019).

TABLES OF CONTENTS OF INDEXED LAW REVIEWS

60 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW REVIEW, NO. 1,

JANUARY, 2019.

Eric R. Claeys. Property, concepts, and functions. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 1-72 (2019).

Yaniv Heled, Liza Vertinsky, Cass Brewer. Why healthcare

companies should be(come) benefit corporations. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 73-144 (2019).

Eric Kades. Of Piketty and perpetuities: dynastic wealth in the

twenty-first century (and beyond). 60 B.C. L. Rev. 145-215

(2019).

Amanda Peters. Mass arrests & the particularized probable

cause requirement. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 217-270 (2019).

Amy-Lee Goodman. Note. A “natural” stand off between the

Food and Drug Administration and the courts: the rise in food-

labeling litigation & the need for regulatory reform. 60 B.C. L.

Rev. 271-315 (2019).

Madeline Roe. Note. Who’s driving that car?: an analysis of

regulatory and potential liability frameworks for driverless

cars. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 317-347 (2019).

Lauren Stewart. Note. Big data discrimination: maintaining

protection of individual privacy without disincentivizing

businesses’ use of biometric data to enhance security. 60 B.C.

L. Rev. 349-386 (2019).

Hale McAnulty. Note. A dirty waste—how renewable energy

policies have financed the unsustainable waste-to-energy

industry. 60 B.C. L. Rev. 387-412 (2019).

46 CAPITAL UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW, NO. 4,

FALL, 2018.

Ashish Bharadwaj, Manveen Singh. A single spark can start a

prairie fire: implications of the 2015 amendments to IEEE-

SA’s patent policy. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 583-608 (2018).

Christina L. Pollard. Here come many more mail-order brides:

why IMBRA fails women escaping the Russian Federation. 46

Cap. U. L. Rev. 609-700 (2018).

Sarah Ingles. Comment. Legislating against hate: why Ohio’s

hate crime statute, and the sentencing enhancements that

support it, cannot remedy institutional problems and continued

bigotry. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 701-738 (2018).

Zachary R. Hoover. Comment. The pervasion of cell phones

and the Fourth Amendment: a right to privacy in locational

data. 46 Cap. U. L. Rev. 739-782 (2018).

Joshua B. Kay. The Americans with Disabilities Act: legal and

practical applications in child protection proceedings. 46 Cap.

U. L. Rev. 783-818 (2018).

44 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL

LAW, NO. 1, PP. 1-239, 2019.

Robert W. Adler. Coevolution of law and science: a Clean

Water Act case study. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 1-65 (2019).

Shana Jones, et al. Roads to nowhere in four states: state and

local governments in the Atlantic southeast facing sea-level

rise. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 67-136 (2019).

Jason Bressler. Note. Blocking interstate natural gas pipelines:

how to curb climate change while strengthening the nation’s

energy system. 44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 137-179 (2019).

Mitchell Hokanson. Note. Avoiding the doldrums: evaluating

the need for change in the offshore wind permitting process.

44 Colum. J. Envtl. L. 181-239 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 20

April 12, 2019

19 COLUMBIA LAW REVIEW, NO. 1, JANUARY, 2019.

Trevor George Gardner. Immigrant sanctuary as the “old

normal”: a brief history of police federalism. 119 Colum. L.

Rev. 1-83 (2019).

Daniel E. Walters. The self-delegation false alarm: analyzing

Auer deference’s effects on agency rules. 119 Colum. L. Rev.

85-168 (2019).

Paul Barker. Note. Religious exemptions and the vocational

dimension of work. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 169-204 (2019).

Cassandra Snyder. Note. Out of context: examining the role of

context in active enforcement foreign patrimony law disputes.

119 Colum. L. Rev. 205-248 (2019).

Jocelyn Simonson. The place of “the people” in criminal

procedure. 119 Colum. L. Rev. 249-307 (2019).

33 CONNECTICUT JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL

LAW, NO. 3, PP. 305-431, 2018.

Paris, Policy, and the Grid. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 305-431

(2018).

Symposium remarks & table of contents. 33 Conn. J. Int’l

L. 305-306 (2018).

Ángel R. Oquendo. Fifty shades of green: from individual

to planetary environmental rights. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 307-

316 (2018).

Manuel Pulgar-Vidal. Paris, Policy, and the Grid: the

future of transnational energy policy. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L.

319-329 (2018).

Steven Ferrey. Rewired infrastructure post-Paris. 33

Conn. J. Int’l L. 331-363 (2018).

Vincent P. Pace. Renewable energy and electric grid

stability after the U.S. Paris withdrawal: looking abroad for

guidance. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 365-398 (2018).

Robert Klee. Response to Vincent P. Pace’s article. 33

Conn. J. Int’l L. 401-407 (2018).

Joseph A. MacDougald. Responding to Paris, Policy, and

the Grid. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 409-422 (2018).

J. Timmons Roberts. Undermining a weak argument: fossil

capitalism, neoliberal climate governance, Paris and a just

transition after Trump. 33 Conn. J. Int’l L. 425-431 (2018).

17 CONNECTICUT PUBLIC INTEREST LAW

JOURNAL, NO. 2, SPRING-SUMMER, 2018.

Lawrence J. Trautman. Grab ‘em by the emoluments: the

crumbling ethical foundation of Donald Trump’s presidency.

17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 169-254 (2018).

Tobin Sparling. Clay pigeon or Trojan horse: Pigeon v.

Turner and the intersection of gay rights and judicial ethics in

Texas. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 255-281 (2018).

Jonathan Erwin-Frank. Is mass incarceration unconstitutional?

The case for Eighth Amendment limits on noncapital sentences.

17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 283-309 (2018).

John Vlahoplus. Sessions v. Morales-Santana: beyond the

mean remedy. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J. 311-336 (2018).

Laura Ann Raymond. Note. Sibling consortium: recognizing

the right to recovery in Connecticut. 17 Conn. Pub. Int. L.J.

337-365 (2018).

96 DENVER LAW REVIEW, NO. 1, PP. 1-202, 2018.

Alice G. Abreu, Richard K. Greenstein. Rebranding tax /

increasing diversity. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 1-49 (2018).

Amy B. Cyphert. The devil is in the details: exploring

restorative justice as an option for campus sexual assault

responses under Title IX. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 51-85 (2018).

Charlotte A. Tschider. Regulating the Internet of Things:

discrimination, privacy, and cybersecurity in the artificial

intelligence age. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 87-143 (2018).

Alexandra J. Berger. Comment. Lessons to be learned:

Taxpayers for Public Education v. Douglas County School

District and the flaws of the Douglas County Choice

Scholarship Program. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 145-176 (2018).

Zach Lass. Comment. Lowe v. Raemisch: lowering the bar of

the qualified immunity defense. 96 Denv. L. Rev. 177-201

(2018).

68 DUKE LAW JOURNAL, NO. 5, FEBRUARY, 2019.

Kate Levine. Discipline and policing. 68 Duke L.J. 839-905

(2019).

Ryan M. Scoville. Ad hoc diplomats. 68 Duke L.J. 907-1002

(2019).

Hugh B. Hamilton III. Note. At the water’s hedge:

international insider-trading enforcement after Morrison. 68

Duke L.J. 1003-1041 (2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 21

April 12, 2019

26 ELDER LAW JOURNAL, NO. 2, PP. 261-460, 2019.

Ian Ayres, Jacob Hacker. Social Security Plus. 26 Elder L.J.

261-285 (2019).

Joanne Song McLaughlin. Limited legal recourse for older

women’s intersectional discrimination under the Age

Discrimination in Employment Act. 26 Elder L.J. 287-321

(2019).

Karen Levy, Lauren Kilgour, Clara Berridge. Regulating

privacy in public/private space: the case of nursing home

monitoring laws. 26 Elder L.J. 323-363 (2019).

Dan Lewis. Note. Thank you for your service: why elderly

veterans with PTSD need medical-legal partnerships. 26 Elder

L.J. 365-394 (2019).

William Hrabe. Note. Will you still need me, will you still hire

me, when I’m sixty-four: disparate impact claims and job

applicants under the ADEA. 26 Elder L.J. 395-429 (2019).

Nora McGuire. Note. Whose dime is it anyway? A

comprehensive look at federal and state government landscapes

for senior financial exploitation laws concerning financial

institutions. 26 Elder L.J. 431-460 (2019).

68 EMORY LAW JOURNAL, NO. 3, PP. 441-684, 2019.

Justin Sevier. Legitimizing character evidence. 68 Emory L.J.

441-508 (2019).

Jonathan Remy Nash. National personal jurisdiction. 68

Emory L.J. 509-562 (2019).

Allen Page. Comment. The problems with alleging Federal

Government conspiracies under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3). 68

Emory L.J. 563-605 (2019).

Mikayla Paolini. Comment. NFL takes a page from the big

tobacco playbook: assumption of risk in the CTE crisis. 68

Emory L.J. 607-642 (2019).

Connor Fuchs. Comment. Process is due: the World Health

Organization prequalification of medicines. 68 Emory L.J.

643-684 (2019).

22 EMPLOYEE RIGHTS AND EMPLOYMENT POLICY

JOURNAL, NO. 2, PP. 175-428, 2018.

Commemorating the Retirement of Douglas Scherer.

22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 175-428 (2018).

Martin H. Malin. In honor of Douglas Scherer.

22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 175-183 (2018).

Wayne N. Outten. Tribute to Douglas Scherer.

22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 185-186 (2018).

Howard A. Glickstein. A tribute to Douglas Scherer.

22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 187-188 (2018).

Ramona L. Paetzold. How Employee Rights &

Employment Policy Journal, thanks to Doug Scherer (and

Martin Malin), enabled my return to life and work.

22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 189-193 (2018).

Michael Selmi. Supreme Court Term 2017-2018: the

umpires play ball. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J.

195-234 (2018).

Ann C. Hodges. Employee voice in arbitration. 22

Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 235-257 (2018).

Marion C. Crain, Ken Matheny. Labor unions, solidarity

and money. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 259-300

(2018).

Maria O’Brien Hylton. A few observations about the

curious state of Massachusetts labor law: public-sector

unions after Janus. 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J.

301-319 (2018).

L. Camille Hébert. Is “MeToo” only a social movement or

a legal movement too? 22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J.

321-336 (2018).

Susan Bisom-Rapp. What we know about equal

employment opportunity law after fifty years of trying. 22

Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 337-354 (2018).

Matthew W. Finkin. Pay privacy in comparative context.

22 Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 355-369 (2018).

Charles A. Sullivan. Clergy contracts. 22 Employee Rts.

& Emp. Pol’y J. 371-408 (2018).

Marcia L. McCormick. Book review. Changing what they

cannot accept: teachers unions fighting education “reform”

from Chicago to Oklahoma. A Fight for the Soul of Public

Education by Stephen K. Ashby, Robert Bruno. 22

Employee Rts. & Emp. Pol’y J. 409-428 (2018).

49 ENVIRONMENTAL LAW REPORTER NEWS &

ANALYSIS, NO. 2, FEBRUARY, 2019.

Beyond words. 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis 10107

(2019).

The Use of PFAS at Industrial and Military Facilities:

Technical, Regulatory, and Legal Issues. Peter Zeeb,

moderator; Rula Deeb, Eric Burneson, Virginia Yingling,

Adam Baas, panelists. 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis

10109-10124 (2019).

Armin Rosencranz, students Shubham Janghu, Pratheek Reddy.

The evolution and influence of international environmental

norms. 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis 10125-10133

(2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 22

April 12, 2019

Carl Bruch, et al. The changing nature of conflict,

peacebuilding, and environmental cooperation. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10134-10154 (2019).

Paul Rissman, Diana Kearney. The rise of the shadow ESG

regulators: investment advisers, sustainability accounting, and

their effects on corporate social responsibility. 49 Envtl. L.

Rep. News & Analysis 10155-10187 (2019).

Recent developments. 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis

10188-10201 (2019).

Recent journal literature. 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis

10202-10203 (2019).

Topical index. 49 Envtl. L. Rep. News & Analysis 10204

(2019).

13 FIU LAW REVIEW, NO. 2, FALL, 2018.

Three Years of Decanal Lectures on Legal Education. 13 FIU

L. Rev. 195-240 (2018).

Tawia B. Ansah. Introduction. 13 FIU L. Rev. 195-197

(2018).

Daniel B. Rodriguez. Legal education and its innovations.

13 FIU L. Rev. 199-214 (2018).

Erwin Chemerinsky. Reflections on the future of legal

education. 13 FIU L. Rev. 215-227 (2018).

Eduardo M. Peñalver. The role of skills instruction in legal

education. 13 FIU L. Rev. 229-240 (2018).

Dane Stuhlsatz. Comment. Florida’s certificate of need: a

prescription for government-private collusion and antitrust

violation. 13 FIU L. Rev. 241-275 (2018).

Michael Pego. Comment. The delusion of amateurism in

college sports: why scholarship student athletes are destined to

be considered “employees” under the NLRA. 13 FIU L. Rev.

277-311 (2018).

28 FORDHAM INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, MEDIA &

ENTERTAINMENT LAW JOURNAL, NO. 4, SUMMER,

2018.

Timothy T. Hsieh. A bridge between copyright and patent law:

towards a modern-day reapplication of the Semiconductor Chip

Protection Act. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J.

729-775 (2018).

Nathan Converse. University trademarks and “mixed speech”

on college campuses: a case study of Gerlich v. Leath and

student free speech rights. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media &

Ent. L.J. 777-829 (2018).

Adam D. Moore. Intellectual property and the prisoner’s

dilemma: a game theory justification of copyrights, patents, and

trade secrets. 28 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J. 831-

869 (2018).

Jeffrey I. Greenwood. Note. Group defamation, power, and a

new test for determining plaintiff eligibility. 28 Fordham

Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J. 871-945 (2018).

132 HARVARD LAW REVIEW, NO. 4, FEBRUARY,

2019.

Robin Bradley Kar, Margaret Jane Radin. Pseudo-contract and

shared meaning analysis. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1135-1219 (2019).

Saikrishna Bangalore Prakash. Of synchronicity and supreme

law. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1220-1299 (2019).

Note. An abdication approach to state standing. 132 Harv. L.

Rev. 1301-1322 (2019).

Note. Equal dignity — heeding its call. 132 Harv. L. Rev.

1323-1344 (2019).

Recent cases. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1345-1360 (2019).

Recent policy statement. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1361-1368 (2019).

Recent election. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1369-1376 (2019).

Recent publications. 132 Harv. L. Rev. 1377-1378 (2019).

107 KENTUCKY LAW JOURNAL, NO. 1, PP. 1-168,

2018-2019.

Adam Mossoff. Trademark as a property right. 107 Ky. L.J. 1-

33 (2018-2019).

Clay Calvert. The First Amendment, compelled speech &

minors: jettisoning the FCC mandate for children’s television

programming. 107 Ky. L.J. 35-59 (2018-2019).

Ben Trachtenberg. The 2015 University of Missouri protests

and their lessons for higher education policy and

administration. 107 Ky. L.J. 61-121 (2018-2019).

Christopher N. Jacovitch. Note. Conflicts between Kentucky’s

new tort reform and the jural rights doctrine. 107 Ky. L.J. 123-

148 (2018-2019).

Chelise L. Conn Greer. Note. Less due process than terrorists:

an analysis of the Eric C. Conn fiasco. 107 Ky. L.J. 149-168

(2018-2019).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

Page 23

April 12, 2019

41 LOYOLA OF LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL

AND COMPARATIVE LAW REVIEW, NO. 3, WINTER,

2018.

The Confiscation of Property in Poland and Efforts at

Restitution. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 269-738

(2018).

Michael Bazyler. Introduction. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 269-271 (2018).

Michael Bazyler, Szymon Gostynski. Restitution of private

property in postwar Poland: the unfinished legacy of the

Second World War and communism. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 273-329 (2018).

Grzegorz Woźniak. Facts and myths on restitution of

property in Poland. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev.

331-350 (2018).

Stefan Jacyno. Reprivatization in Poland. 41 Loy. L.A.

Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 351-357 (2018).

Barbara Blaszczyk. The attempts at legal regulation of

restitution in Poland in the early transition period: main

dilemmas and obstacles. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L.

Rev. 359-367 (2018).

Leszek Bosek, Katarzyna Królikowska. Constitutional

dimensions of the judicial restitution of wrongly

expropriated property in Poland. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 369-407 (2018).

Przemyslaw Szymczyk. Are current owners and

usufructuaries of Polish real estate nationalized after World

War II entitled to the status of parties to reprivatization

proceedings? 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 409-429

(2018).

Katarzyna J. McNaughton. The problem of property

reprivatization in Warsaw. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L.

Rev. 431-467 (2018).

Maciej Górski. The reprivatization act for Warsaw real

estate: presentation of the desired assumptions together

with remarks on the draft act presented by the Polish

government. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 469-488

(2018).

Jozef Forystek. The rule of law and the effectiveness of

enforcement of claims of former owners wrongfully

deprived of their property. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L.

Rev. 489-501 (2018).

Malgorzata Świętczak. Property restitution processes in

Poland: perspective of the Commissioner for Human

Rights. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 503-527

(2018).

Radoslaw Wiśniewski. Conditions of citizenship and

domicile in Polish restitution regulations in light of

European law. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 529-

546 (2018).

Mateusz Tchórzewski. Taxation of the restitution of

confiscated property in Poland. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 547-556 (2018).

Tomasz Luterek. The new Polish restitution act: an

unacceptable project. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev.

557-567 (2018).

Edna Kaplan. The 71-year quest for restitution of stolen

properties in Poland: Engelman and Szafran family

properties. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 569-580

(2018).

Karol F. Radziwiłł. Transcribed remarks from Warsaw,

Poland, Polish restitution symposium. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 581-582 (2018).

Jan Kuklík. Restitution of Jewish property in the Czech

Republic. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 583-606

(2018).

Branko Lakić, Haris Dajč. The Holocaust and restitution in

Serbia: confiscation of Jewish property in Serbia. 41 Loy.

L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 607-616 (2018).

Aharon Mor. How restitution of property of Shoah

(Holocaust) victims was carried out in Israel. 41 Loy. L.A.

Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 617-676 (2018).

Kathryn Lee Boyd, Thomas Watson, Karly Valenzuela.

Justice for Nazi and Communist era property expropriation

through international investment arbitration. 41 Loy. L.A.

Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 677-699 (2018).

Kristen L. Nelson. The biggest (stolen) house on the

(Eastern) bloc: lessons from the Terezin Declaration to

Poland for enacting Holocaust property restitution

legislation. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l & Comp. L. Rev. 701-725

(2018).

Evan Hochberg. Toward a fair and just comprehensive

property restitution law in Poland. 41 Loy. L.A. Int’l &

Comp. L. Rev. 727-738 (2018).

50 LOYOLA UNIVERSITY CHICAGO LAW JOURNAL,

NO. 1, FALL, 2018.

The Question of Religious Freedom: From John Courtney

Murray, SJ and Vatican II to the Present. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J.

1-209 (2018).

Miguel H. Díaz. An unfinished project: John Courtney

Murray, religious freedom, and unresolved tensions in

contemporary American society. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 1-23

(2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

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April 12, 2019

Robin W. Lovin. Religious freedom and public argument:

John Courtney Murray on “the American proposition.” 50

Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 25-44 (2018).

Barry Sullivan. Prophesy, public theology, and questions

of justice: some modest reflections. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J.

45-75 (2018).

Leslie C. Griffin. Religious freedom, human rights, and

peaceful coexistence. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 77-105 (2018).

Hille Haker. The right to religious freedom—a theological

comment. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 107-136 (2018).

Kathleen A. Brady. Religious freedom and the common

good. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 137-164 (2018).

Carmen Nanko-Fernández. From common good to

convivencia: religious liberty and the cake wars. 50 Loy.

U. Chi. L.J. 165-180 (2018).

Thomas C. Berg. Religious freedom and

nondiscrimination. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 181-209 (2018).

Tiffani N. Darden. Constitutionally different: a child’s right to

substantive due process. 50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 211-270 (2018).

Nicholas Almendares. The false allure of settlement pressure.

50 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 271-325 (2018).

8 MICHIGAN JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL &

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW, NO. 1, FALL, 2018.

Katherine Fiedler, Steven Lord, Jason J. Czarnezki. Life cycle

costing and food systems: concepts, trends, and challenges of

impact valuation. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 1-47 (2018).

Robert B. McKinstry Jr., John C. Dernbach. Applying the

Pennsylvania Environmental Rights Amendment meaningfully

to climate disruption. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 49-114

(2018).

Bret Wells, Tracy Hester. Abandoned but not forgotten:

improperly plugged and orphaned wells may pose serious

concerns for shale development. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L.

115-183 (2018).

Sarah J. Adams-Schoen. Beyond localism: harnessing state

adaptation lawmaking to facilitate local climate resilience. 8

Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin. L. 185-244 (2018).

Grant Snyder. Note. How safe is too safe? Exemption 7(F) and

the withholding of critical documents. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. &

Admin. L. 245-271 (2018).

Joan Campau. Note. Presidential permitting for pipelines:

constitutionality and reviewability. 8 Mich. J. Envtl. & Admin.

L. 273-295 (2018).

42 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY REVIEW OF LAW &

SOCIAL CHANGE, NO. 4, PP. 529-752, 2019.

Briana Beltran. 134,368 unnamed workers: client-centered

representation on behalf of H-2A agricultural guestworkers. 42

N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc. Change 529-594 (2019).

Richard Blum. Labor picketing, the right to protest, and the

neoliberal First Amendment. 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc.

Change 595-648 (2019).

Lindsey Lawton. A new loyalty oath: New York’s targeted ban

on state funds for Palestinian boycott supporters. 42 N.Y.U.

Rev. L. & Soc. Change 649-698 (2019).

Jessica A. Moldovan. Authenticity at work: harmonizing Title

VII with free speech jurisprudence to protect employee

authenticity in the workplace. 42 N.Y.U. Rev. L. & Soc.

Change 699-752 (2019).

94 NORTH DAKOTA LAW REVIEW, NO. 1, PP. 1-288,

2019.

Carol R. Goforth. How blockchain could increase the need for

and availability of contractual ordering for companies and their

investors. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 1-63 (2019).

Kevin Morrow. Student article. Bridging the jurisdictional

void: cross-deputization agreements in Indian Country. 94

N.D. L. Rev. 65-94 (2019).

Eugene Temchenko. Student article. Discovering the truth

behind an amicus brief. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 95-147 (2019).

Neoshia R. Roemer. Finding harmony or swimming in the

void: the unavoidable conflict between the Interstate Compact

on the Placement of Children and the Indian Child Welfare Act.

94 N.D. L. Rev. 149-180 (2019).

Logan Carpenter. Case comment. Negligence — standards of

care: premises liability claims alleging dangerous activities

against a landowner barred under most circumstances. Bjerk v.

Anderson, 2018 ND 124, 911 N.W.2d 343. 94 N.D. L. Rev.

181-196 (2019).

Alexandra Carthew. Case comment. Searches and seizures —

Fourth Amendment and reasonableness in general: protection

of privacy interests in the digital age. Carpenter v. United

States, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018). 94 N.D. L. Rev. 197-220

(2019).

Kaitlyn Henke. Case comment. Forfeitures — personal

property in general: return of noncontraband files. State v.

Kremer, 2018 ND 61, 907 N.W.2d 403. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 221-

238 (2019).

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Anthony Saccocio. Case comment. Civil rights —

discrimination by reason of sexual orientation or identity: the

Sixth Circuit determines that transgender and transitioning

status are protected classes under Title VII. Equal

Employment Opportunity Commission v. R.G. & G.R.

Harris Funeral Homes, Inc., 884 F.3d 560 (6th Cir. 2018). 94

N.D. L. Rev. 239-257 (2019).

North Dakota Supreme Court Review. 94 N.D. L. Rev. 259-

288 (2019).

33 OHIO STATE JOURNAL ON DISPUTE

RESOLUTION, NO. 4, PP. 491-584, 2018.

Introduction to bibliography issue and keyword outline. 33

Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol. 491-496 (2018).

Articles. 33 Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol. 497-577 (2018).

Books. 33 Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol. 579-583 (2018).

79 OHIO STATE LAW JOURNAL, NO. 4, PP. 619-900,

2018.

Re-Thinking State Relevance. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 619-899

(2018).

Courtney Lauren Anderson. Planning for public health. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 619-635 (2018).

Cindy G. Buys. Help or hindrance? The relevance of states

in implementing international criminal treaties. 79 Ohio St.

L.J. 637-649 (2018).

Daniel C. K. Chow. Trade sanctions and the division of

federal-state power over international trade. 79 Ohio St.

L.J. 651-666 (2018).

Denise A. Grab, Michael A. Livermore. Environmental

federalism in a dark time. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 667-684 (2018).

James G. Hodge Jr., Danielle Chronister, Alexandra Hess,

Madeline Morcelle, Jennifer Piatt, Sarah A. Wetter. Public

health preemption+: constitutional affronts to public health

innovations. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 685-703 (2018).

Linda A. Malone. The emperor’s new clothes: the variety

of stakeholders in climate change regulation assuming the

mantle of federal and international authority. 79 Ohio St.

L.J. 705-736 (2018).

William McGuire. A state-level view of NAFTA:

economic implications and policy options. 79 Ohio St. L.J.

737-759 (2018).

Sarah Schindler. Food federalism: states, local

governments, and the fight for food sovereignty. 79 Ohio

St. L.J. 761-780 (2018).

Ian Sheldon. Economic and legal analysis of climate policy

and border tax adjustments: federal vs. state regulation. 79

Ohio St. L.J. 781-800 (2018).

Navad Shoked. Cities taxing new sins: the judicial

embrace of local excise taxation. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 801-842

(2018).

Lindsay F. Wiley. Medicaid for all? State-level single-

payer health care. 79 Ohio St. L.J. 843-899 (2018).

19 RUTGERS RACE AND THE LAW REVIEW, NO. 2,

PP. 77-157, 2018.

Taurus Myhand. Student article. A dream still deferred: the

unlawful use of student fees for instructional technology in an

Alabama public school causing a disparate impact for minority

children. 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 77-100 (2018).

Connor Vincent Martin. Note. New Jersey’s experiment with

interdistrict school choice as a racially neutral alternative: is it

succeeding? 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 101-132 (2018).

Agustin Paneque. Note. Civil rights and tort calculation:

challenging the reliability and constitutionality of race-based

and gender-based life expectancy and future wage earning

calculations. 19 Rutgers Race & L. Rev. 133-157 (2018).

71 STANFORD LAW REVIEW, NO. 1, JANUARY, 2019.

William Baude. Constitutional liquidation. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 1-

70 (2019).

Ben Gifford. Prison crime and the economics of incarceration.

71 Stan. L. Rev. 71-135 (2019).

Sarah E. Light. The law of the corporation as environmental

law. 71 Stan. L. Rev. 137-213 (2019).

Katherine Kaiser Moy. Note. Tailoring Seibert’s intent inquiry

to two-step counterterrorism interrogations. 71 Stan. L. Rev.

215-263 (2019).

26 TEXAS INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW

JOURNAL, NO. 2, PP. 133-272, 2018.

Patent Damages Symposium. 26 Tex. Intell. Prop. L.J. 133-

272 (2018).

Michael Abramowicz, Cost-plus patent damages. 26 Tex.

Intell. Prop. L.J. 133-185 (2018).

Lisa Larrimore Ouellette. Adjusting patent damages for

nonpatent incentives. 26 Tex. Intell. Prop. L.J. 187-213

(2018).

CURRENT INDEX TO LEGAL PERIODICALS

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April 12, 2019

Ronen Avraham. Should courts award pain and suffering

damages in patent infringement cases? 26 Tex. Intell. Prop.

L.J. 215-230 (2018).

Peter Lee. Distinguishing damages paid from

compensation received: a thought experiment. 26 Tex.

Intell. Prop. L.J. 231-272 (2018).

28 TRANSNATIONAL LAW & CONTEMPORARY

PROBLEMS, NO. 1, WINTER, 2018.

Halil Rahman Basaran. The Cyprus question, international law

and European law: an assessment. 28 Transnat’l L. &

Contemp. Probs. 1-26 (2018).

M. Ehteshamul Bari. The incorporation of the system of non-

party caretaker government in the Constitution of Bangladesh

in 1996 as a means of strengthening democracy, its deletion in

2011 and the lapse of Bangladesh into tyranny following the

non-participatory general election of 2014: a critical appraisal.

28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 27-88 (2018).

Robert C. Blitt. The Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s

(OIC) response to sexual orientation and gender identity rights:

a challenge to equality and nondiscrimination under

international law. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 89-187

(2018).

Lisa V. Zivkovic. The alignment between the Electronic

Communications Privacy Act and the European Union’s

General Data Protection Regulation: reform needs to protect

the data subject. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 189-232

(2018).

Lacey K. Reimer. Note. Climate change and the Arctic: ideas

for how the United States and Canada can protect their Arctic

Indigenous peoples. 28 Transnat’l L. & Contemp. Probs. 233-

261 (2018).

45 TRANSPORTATION LAW JOURNAL, NO. 1,

PP. 1-55, 2018.

Matthew J. Warren. Judicial review of Surface Transportation

Board decisions: an empirical analysis. 45 Transp. L.J. 1-34

(2018).

R. Wai Wong. Autonomous rail technologies: diffusion, risk

perception & public acceptance. 45 Transp. L.J. 35-47 (2018).

Daniel Jozwiak. Comment. Mich. Flyer LLC v. Wayne Cty.

Airport Auth. 45 Transp. L.J. 49-51 (2018).

Jesse Carey. Comment. State ex rel. Mo. Auto. Dealer’s

Ass’n v. Mo. Dep’t of Revenue. 45 Transp. L.J. 53-55 (2018).

27 TULANE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AND

COMPARATIVE LAW, NO. 1, WINTER, 2018.

Divesh Kaul. Trans-Pacific Partnership Trump(ed): was TPP

that bad an acronym in new U.S. trade terminology? 27 Tul. J.

Int’l & Comp. L. 1-53 (2018).

Patrick T. Quirk. The undefined remains unprotected: tensions

between conscience and the law in Germany by way of Joseph

Isensee. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 55-92 (2018).

Katherine Davis. Comment. Seismicity induced by hydraulic

fracturing and wastewater disposal injection: a comparison of

regulatory frameworks. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 93-110

(2018).

Emily Dombrowski. Comment. Addressing art trafficking and

restitution through anti-money laundering legal regimes. 27

Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 111-130 (2018).

Adrian Lopez. Comment. The future of corporate inversions

under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L.

131-150 (2018).

Naznen Rahman. Comment. A comparative analysis of air

pollution control in Delhi and Beijing: can India’s model of

judicial activism affect environmental change in China? 27

Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 151-180 (2018).

Margaret Scharle. Comment. Learning from the not-so-distant

past: using the Iranian negotiations to guide the

nonproliferation of North Korea. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L.

181-199 (2018).

S. J. Tilden. Comment. Africa’s conflict with the International

Criminal Court: the African Court of Justice and Human and

Peoples’ Rights as an alternative to the ICC. 27 Tul. J. Int’l &

Comp. L. 201-218 (2018).

Claire Burkes. Recent development. Jesner v. Arab Bank:

crime or punishment—differing interpretations of the Alien

Tort Statute. 27 Tul. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 219-227 (2018).

96 UNIVERSITY OF DETROIT MERCY LAW REVIEW,

NO. 1, FALL, 2018.

Symposium on Sanctuary Cities. 96 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 1-

137 (2018).

Andrew F. Moore. Introduction to the Symposium on

Sanctuary Cities: a brief review of the legal landscape. 96

U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 1-23 (2018).

Kristina M. Campbell. Sanctuary, temporary protected

status, and Catholic social teaching. 96 U. Det. Mercy L.

Rev. 25-53 (2018).

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Ilaria Di Gioia. From liberal states’ rights litigation to

liberal states’ rights discourse: a study of state oppositional

strategies to the ACA and federal immigration laws. 96 U.

Det. Mercy L. Rev. 55-76 (2018).

Elizabeth Knowles. Detained without due process: when

does it end? 96 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 77-103 (2018).

Glenys P. Spence. A chameleon in the courts — the fallacy

of agency “intra-circuit non-acquiescence” in temporary

protected status jurisprudence: time for uniformity to

address the plight of disaster-induced displacement for

migrant groups in the United States. 96 U. Det. Mercy L.

Rev. 105-137 (2018).

49 UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS LAW REVIEW, NO. 1,

FALL, 2018.

MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here? 49 U.

Mem. L. Rev. 1-313 (2018).

Demetria Frank, Daniel Kiel. Where Do We Go From

Here: Memphis and the legacy of Dr. King’s unfinished

work. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 1-26 (2018).

Sen. Doug Jones. MLK50 Symposium: Where Do We Go

From Here? 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 27-31 (2018).

Hon. Eric H. Holder Jr. MLK50 Symposium: Where Do

We Go From Here? 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 33-42 (2018).

Tracey Maclin, student Maria Savarese. Martin Luther

King, Jr. and pretext stops (and arrests): reflections on how

far we have not come fifty years later. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev.

43-76 (2018).

Mark Osler. Short of the mountaintop: race neutrality,

criminal law, and the Jericho road ahead. 49 U. Mem. L.

Rev. 77-100 (2018).

Toussaint Losier. The rise and fall of the 1969 Chicago

Jobs Campaign: street gangs, coalition politics, and the

origins of mass incarceration. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 101-136

(2018).

Richard L. Hasen. Civil Right No. 1: Dr. King’s unfinished

voting rights revolution. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 137-166

(2018).

Dorothy E. Roberts. The most shocking and inhuman

inequality: thinking structurally about poverty, racism, and

health inequities. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 167-183 (2018).

Tomiko Brown-Nagin. Just schools: a holistic approach to

the education of impoverished students. 49 U. Mem. L.

Rev. 185-204 (2018).

Dorothy A. Brown. Homeownership in black and white:

the role of tax policy in increasing housing inequity. 49 U.

Mem. L. Rev. 205-227 (2018).

Dayna Bowen Matthew. “Lessons from The Other

America.” Turning a public health lens on fighting racism

and poverty. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 229-262 (2018).

Charles W. McKinney Jr. Beyond dreams and mountains:

Martin King’s challenge to the arc of history. 49 U. Mem.

L. Rev. 263-284 (2018).

Beverly Daniel Tatum. Community or chaos? Dialogue as

twenty-first century activism. 49 U. Mem. L. Rev. 285-313

(2018).

22 UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA JOURNAL OF

LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE, NO. 2, PP. 71-120, 2019.

Regina Austin. “Second looks, second chances”: collaborating

with Lifers, Inc. on a video about commutation of LWOP

sentences. 22 U. Pa. J.L. & Soc. Change 71-93 (2019).

Ke Gang. Student article. Federal courts’ habeas corpus

jurisdiction on a Secretary of State’s extradition decision in the

context of a Convention Against Torture challenge. 22 U. Pa.

J.L. & Soc. Change 95-120 (2019).

50 UNIVERSITY OF THE PACIFIC LAW REVIEW,

NO. 2, PP. 177-316, 2019.

Review of Selected 2018 California Legislation. 50 U. Pac. L.

Rev. 177-315 (2019).

37 VIRGINIA ENVIRONMENTAL LAW JOURNAL,

NO. 1, PP. 1-88, 2019.

Sharmila L. Murthy. States and cities as “norm sustainers”: a

role for subnational actors in the Paris Agreement on climate

change. 37 Va. Envtl. L.J. 1-51 (2019).

Melissa K. Scanlan. Droughts, floods, and scarcity on a

climate-disrupted planet: understanding the legal challenges

and opportunities for groundwater sustainability. 37 Va. Envtl.

L.J. 52-88 (2019).

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